Ink In The Sand: The First 50 Years of the Florida Press Association

Transcription

Ink In The Sand: The First 50 Years of the Florida Press Association
n r e linotype room at T h e Florida Ties-Union around the fun1of tlrc crrrtuy.
By JOI-IN PAUL JONES
The First 50 Years
of the Florida
Press Association
study of the history
of the Florida Press
Association (FPA)
during the first 50
years of its existence
is a fascinating experience. The period
1879 to 1929was a particularly interesting half century for Florida journalism as well as an interesting era in
the life of the state.
The period covered the SpanishAmerican War, the yellow fever epidemics, World War I, the coming of
age of the automobile and the building of a network of roads-including
40
the famous Tamiami Trail through
the heart of the unknown Florida Everglades. That age also encompassed
the period of building and expansion,
the boom years in the early 1920sand
the final economic collapse in the
mid-1920s.
The prominent editors before and
after the turn of the century came to
Florida to seek their fortunes or to ply
their trade of journalism in a new and
vigorous land. They were men of vision and versatility, whose education
had taken them into other professions
before they added that of the journalist to their escutcheon
They were doctors, lawyers and
educators, as well as writers. Some
had been businessmen, and before
that soldiers in either the Union or
Confederate Army. Many already
had been involved in politics and
many more became immersed in the
game in Florida.
The press association was founded
in Gainesville, Florida, in 1879 by a
handful of editors who banded together for their protection. They
formed this affiliation primarily
against unscrupulous advertisers
who used the editors' columns to help
sell their merchandise-and then
never paid their advertising bills.
A!s the years went by the association lbecame more involved with the
affahn of Florida as an emerging state.
The Imembers used the association's
Strf cngth to press for reforms, growth,
PC
' )motionof tourism, road building,
better education in the public schools
1 universities and, in general, all
islation that would push Florida
!ad in the brotherhood of states.
Editors of the pre-1900 years were
excellent writers and speakers, but
they were long-winded, prone to
quote the classics, colorful in their
language, and loved to tell a good
story. At conventions they were likely
to indulge in horseplay and shenanigans seldom seen in the sober days of
the businessman-editor who followed World War 11. The editors liked
to indulge in "wars of the pen" that
sometimes resulted in severely damaged feelingsamong their colleagues,
wars that many times came from a
slighting remark in one man's editorial about another editor's town.
The town of an editor was as sacred
as his children and no pen except his
own should be tuned against it, just
as no strap except his own should be
applied to the backside of his child.
In this history the writer has made
every effort to clothe the facts of Nstory with the colorful events that depicted the journalists of the day as
flesh and blood c r e a m and the historical events of Florida as episodesof
drama and reality. The men and
women who travel through these
pages became like companions on a
long and exciting journey, and when
they passed away,one by one, theloss
was never quite erased.
Another point that stands out in
thle narrative is the writex's impression that early journalists had high
opinions of themselves. Even though
these men referred to themselves as
"pen pushers," "quill driven," "penFlorida Living / August 1992
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..
were builders-builders not only of
cil pushers," and even "tripod men,"
newspaper empires in Florida that
they loved to hear the mayors of the
became the ]acksonmlle Times-Unions,
towns where they met talk about the
power and glory of the press and the
Miami Heralds, Tampa Tribunes, St. Petersburg Times and Orlando Sentinelsanctified atmosphere of the editorial
office-where the editor reigned in
Stars, but builders of towns and villages. They were so full of pride and
robes of purest white.
so high in morale, that they attracted
That they believed such publicity
settlers from all over the world to
is evidenced in their own speeches
and in the news stories announcing
make Florida one of the great growth
states in the union.
their arrival in a city for m annual
At the 50 annual meetings of the
convention, news stories that said,
association, the building and devel"The most powerful, the most eduopment of Florida and
cated and the most
"The prominent
its conununities were
beneficent men in
always a topic of irnFlorida" had come to
town Modesty among
editors before and portance to the editors
the "penpushers" was after the turri of !he and, as seen in the following pages, the asas scarce in those days
century came to
sociation worked hard
as sin in the pulpit. In
to get the state to set
fact, the pulpit and the
press were frequently
Florida to seek
up an organization, financed by state funds,
linked as the saviors of
their fortunes or to
to spend 365
a
mankind,
In d e f of~ these
ply their trade of
promoting ROTida's climate and recearly editors and writers, it should be s d d journalism in a new reational advantages.
They were buildersthat they did play an
important part in the and
land-"
first, last and always.
It should be underbuilding of Florida.
They carried the banner of the state
stood at this point that the main subwherevertheywent and sang Florida's
stance of this report comes from the
pr,aises in the national press convenreports of the various meetings of the
tions, in Cuba, in Nassau and at world
Florida Press Association and other
press meetings in Geneva, Switzerpress groups as these meetings were
1and.Theytookleadershiprolesinthe written about and published in the
founding of national and regional
newspapers of Florida. These are the
press groups. These men brought betthings the members of the press said
about themselves and their involveter government to their villages and
helped thembecome towns and then
ment in the affairs of government,
cities. They were proud people-and
local and state.
they had every right to be.
Thereal history of the Florida Press
One pord probably sums up the
Association is best shown by what
sweep and scope of the entire 50 years
happened, or did not happen, at the
covered by this history-"builders."
state conventions. After some of the
The leaders of the Florida Press
daily newspapers broke away from
Association during that half century
the Florida Press Association and
formed the Associated Dailies of Florida, the activities
of that group were also followed because, eventually,
the dailies went out of business as a separate association and returned to the
FPA.That return did not occur, however, during the
first 50 years of the Florida
Press Association.
171e nezusmom at The Florida
Times-Union at turn of the
mtury.
Florida Living / August 1992
The First .I
0 Years
The Florida Press Association was
founded on Feb. 19, 1879, in a brief
night meeting in Gainesville, Florida,
during the Florida State Fair being
held in that city. "Fathef of the Press
Association was Hugh Bowen
McCallum, an ordained minister and
newspaper owner-publisher of The
norida Daily Union in Jacksonville,
who, with a handful of other Florida
newspaper publishers, decided the
state needed an assodation of newspaper owners, editors and managers.
McCallum served as president of
the FPA in 1879,1880 and 1881.Other
officers elected at that first meeting
were Dr. J.P.Wall, publisher of 771e
Sunland Tribune, Tampa, vice-president; Fred W. Hoyt, Fernandina Obsemer and Mirror, secretary, and J.A.
Whitney, Fernandina Express, hcasurer.
An executive committee composed of the following men was
also elected at that first meeting:
D.H. Elliott, Florida Dispatch, Jacksonville; J. Ira Gore, Florida State Journal, Cedar Key; George Pratt, Palafka
Herald; C.A. Choatq Seville Indepcndent and M. F. McCook, newspaper
affiliation unknown.
Florida's first state journalism organization was the 16th such group
founded in the United States. Its
founding followed that of the Colorado Press Association in 1878 and
came ahead of the Louisiana Press
Association in 1880. It shared honors
in Florida with the founding of nu
Bradfbrd County Telegraplt, Starke,
which also claims 1879 as the year of
its birth Other notable events 'that
year were the invention of the electric
Ught bulb by Thomas A. Edison and
the establishment of the F.W.
Woolworth Company.
The year prior to the founding of
the Florida Press Association, Florida
had 33 newspapers, according to
Pettengill's Newspaper Directory and
Adurtiser's Handbook, published in
1878. Those newspapers induded the
following papers:
Apopka Clty, Florida Pioneer, P a s
chal C. Hughes, editor and publisher.
Cedar Key, Florida Stnte Journal,
R.H.McUvaine, editor and publisher.
Fernandina, ExpreSs, John A.
Whitney, publisher.
Fort Read, Florida Crescent, F. L.
Robertson, publisher.
Gainesville, Gainesville Times,
E.M. Hampton & Co., publishers.
Jacksonville, Sun and Press, N.K.
Sawyer & Son, publishers.
Jacksonville, Jacksonville Union,
Sidney T. Gates, publisher.
Jacksonville, Florida Agriculturist,
Chas. H. Walton & Co., publishers.
Jacksonville, Florida Baptist, H.B.
McCallum. editor and publisher.
Jacksonville, Scrf+Tmpical, H.W.
Reed, publisher.
Key West, Key of the Gulf; H.A.
Crane, publisher.
Key West, Dispatch, C.T.F.Clarke,
publisher.
Lake City, Lake Cify Reporter,
Charles A. Finley, publisher.
Leesburg, Sumter County Advance,
C.L. Thomas, publisher.
Live Oak, The Expositor, J.C.
Gallahan, publisher.
Madison, ThcReaorder, E.D.Beggs,
publisher.
Madison, Sun, Pope & Johnston,
publishers.
Marianna, ?'he Courier, Joseph M.
Maultsby, publisher.
Milton, Milton Standard, E.B.
Bedford, publisher.
Monticello, Tile Coratitufion, F.R.
Fildes & Son, publishers.
Ocala, East Florida Banner, F.E.
Harris, publisher.
Palatka, Eastern Herald, G.W. Ratt,
publisher.
Pensacola, The Pensacola Herald,
Sam Bard, publisher.
Pensacola, Pensacola Advance, Advance Printing Co., publishers.
Pensacola, Gazctte, J.W. Dorr, publisher.
Quincy, Herald, W.W. Keep, Jr.,
publisher.
St. Augustine, Florida Press, J.O.
Whitney, publisher.
Sanford, South FloridaJoumal, Way
& Osbom, publishers.
Tallahassee, Floridian, C.E. Dyke,
publisher.
Tallahassee, Florida Patriot, C.J.
Bemreutter, publisher.
Tallahassee, Florida Inrmigrant,
Bureau of Immigration, publishers.
Tampa, Tantpa Guardian, James T.
Magbee, editor Pr publisher.
Tampa, Sunland Tribune, Chas. N.
Hawkins, publisher.
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FPA's First President
The first president of the Florida
Press Association was Hugh Bowen
McCallum, who served three terms in
that office. He was born in Knox
County, Tennessee, in 1837.When he
was 15 years old, he attended East
Tennessee University for several
terms and during the winter of 1852
began a course of study leading to the
ministry.During the next three years,
he studied at East Tennessee University and Union University at
Murfreesboro. Eventually his health
failed and McCallum had to abandon
his schooling.
e first arrived
in Florida in
1856 and visited the state
several winters
after that, but
he did not remain permanently until
1867. Prior to his permanent residency in Florida, he settled in Camden, South Carolina, resumed his
theological studies, became a private
in the volunteer army of South Carolina during the Civil War and eventually became the 15th Regiment's
chaplain. In 1861, he was ordained a
minister in the Baptist faith.
.After the war, Reverend McCallurn married Elizabeth H. Haynesworth of Camden County and moved
to Lake City, Florida, where he became pastor of the Baptist church and
founded nlc Florida Baptist ]oumal.
Several years later, the McCallums
moved to Jacksonville where Reverend McCallum started Tlte Florida
Press with W.W. Douglass. The
Florida Press was a strong supporter
of Democratic Party principles and
held an inlluential position with the
party. The last record of the
newspaper's existence was in Sep
tember 1880.
During part of that period, the Reverend McCallum also served as pastor
for the Baptist church of Jacksonville.
He was a supply minister for a year
until he could be replaced by another
minister.
W.W. Douglass and McCallum
purchased mother newspaper, n u
Daily Florida Union, from the Stevens
broll\crs in 1877. This newspaper advanced to an afternoon daily, then to
a permanent morning dally. Douglass
eventually sold out, leaving
McCallum with the ownership. Ln
1883, McCallum sold The Florida
Union to Jones, Varnum and Company. This consolidation brought
about a circulation nearly twice as
large as any other Florida daily newspaper. This consolidation marked the
beginning of The Florida Time*-Union
that has continued in Jacksonville
until the present.
In referring to newspapers owned
by McCallum at the time he was
elected president of FPA, sometimes
he was called "editor of 7 l e Florida
Baptist," and at other Hmes "owner of
nte Daily Florida Union." Actually he
owned both publications.
McCallum did not live to see the
full flowering of this merger. me
Florida Tintcs-Union was only a few
days old when he died. Although he
had been suffering from ill health off
and on for many years, the death was
a great shock to McCallum's friends.
Announcement of the sale of ntc
Florida Daily Union appeared in the
Jan.28,1883, issue of nre Florida Times,
followed by other notices on Jan.29
and 30 about the policies of the new
newspaper, but McCdlum died on
Jan. 30 and was buried the next day.
77re Florida Times in reporting his
death described him as a man of
"wonderful persistency and energy of
character, displayed with a constant
devotion to some high impulse and
purpose."
McCaUum was known throughout
Florida for his editorials and "displayed a resolute intent to promote
the public interest and morals as far as
it is possible for an editorial party
exponent to manifest it," the paper
stated.
While the first president of the
Florida Press Association was a minister-journalist, the first vice-president was a doctor-journalist.
Dr. J.P. Wall received his medical
degree inSouth Carolina at age 22. He
served during the Civil War as chief
surgeon at a Confederate Anny h o c
pita1 in Richmond, Virginia. After the
war, as a practicing physician in
Tampa, Florida, he lost his wife and a
daughter to yellow fever and, as a
result, became one of the most dediFlorida Living / August 1992
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Nnospaper boys loading The Miami Evening Record in the 1890s.
cated doctors in the state to learn everything possible about this disease.
He was one of the first physicians to
state his belief that yellow fever was
carried and spread by mosquitoes.
He served in Tampa as a self-appointed healthofficer and port physician. He was mayor of Tampa in 1877
and 1878 and in 1876 his name appeared in the first issue of a new
weekly newspaper, l7re Sunland Tribune, as an associate editor.
Duel in a Cow Pen
Journalistically, Dr. Wall will be
remembered for his sharp editorial
pen. Many of hisfellow editors of
opposing political persuasion, for the
most part, felt his vicious thrusts. At
the time of his death, 77te Times-Union
related the following story.
"The death of Dr. Wall also reveals
the controversy between him and
Editor F.E. Harris eighteen years
ago, that was about to lead to a duel.
It was during one of the years when
Dr. Wall was a Tampa editor and
the challenger was Editor Harris of
17re Ocala Banner. The trouble came
about in this way.
"The Hon. W.P.~ a i s l k then,
,
as
now, a voter in Tampa, but a resident
in Ocala, was about to make a tour of
Florida Living / August 1992
the United States and Alaska. Editor
Harris in his paper detailed Mr.
Haisley's prospective journey. As
that memorable trip began and ended
in Tampa, Editor Harris, at the end of
his article innocently inquired,
'Where is Tampa? This inquiry was
t.&en by Editor Wall as a reflectionon
the good name of a future great city of
the West Gulf Coast.
"Dr. Wall's reply to Editor Harris
started a controversy which continued until the latter became insulted
and sent Dr. Wall a challenge, which
was accepted. Now came the designation of the place and naming of weap
ons by the challenged party. Judge
Editor Harris' rage, disgust, surprise
and then laughter when his second
read himDr.Wall's letter naming place
and character of arms.The letter was:
"'Will meet you at a certain cowpen near Brooksville; weapons, shovels; distance, ten paces; ammunition,
the droppings of the cattle.'
"Of course it took some time for
Editor Harris to cool down, but as
Hme passed, all resentment fled, and
when the news of Dr. Wall's death
came none regretted the sad occurrence more than the Ocala newspa-
p m ".
rite Tinres-Union reported Editor
Harris as recalling also when he and
Dr. Wall were tarred with the same
brush. It seems that Harris and Wall
condemned Brooksville and its citi-
zensbecause Brooksvillehad so many
murders. Citizens of that city held an
indignation meeting and ended up
warning the two editors that if they
ever came into Hernando County,
they would be roughly treated.
Shortly after the indignation meeting, Editor Harris met a long-time
friend from Brooksville, and in discussion of the affair said, "Why, Jim,
you know better. You knew I told the
truth Why didn't you stop and tell
them the facts?"
"Oh,yes," replied Jim, laughing.
"That is so, Frank, but it didn't seem
prudent at the time for me to champion your cause."
Another oneof Wall's editorial victims was said to have been the editor
of Thc Key oftk Gulfin Key West. This
man, H.A. Crane, was nicknamed
"Old Yellow Legs," by Wall, and the
name stuck with him all of his life.
The Sunland Tribune and another
weekly merged in 1893to become nu
Tampa Times. That was in February. In
March, Dr. Wall encouraged Wallace
Fisher Stovall to found The Tampa
Tribune, and the first issue of that
newspaper appeared on Mar. 23,
1893. Dr. Wall contributed editorials
to rite Tampa Tribune until his death
at a medical conventionin Gainesville
in 1895.
Dr. Wall's death at the Gainesville
medical association meeting was a
dramatic went, as told by a writer for
Tfle Tampa Morning Tribune on page
one on the morning of Apr. 19,1895:
"At 9:30 the chair announced the
reading of a paper onaPublicHygiene
in the Light of Recent Observations
and Experiment3 by Dr. Wall.' He
came forward and took hia stand on
the floor at the left end of the
secretary's table and facing the audience, looking west. He began reading
from a proof sheet printed by a publishing concern, and when he had
continued for some ten minutesit was
noticed that he was nervous.
"Someone remarked that Dr. Wall
was more nervous than usual. He
stopped reading and said:'Hightones
and tony suppers do not seem to
agree with me.' Then he resumed his
reading. He continued a few minutes
when he again became nervous, and
looked Like he did not know what
to do with his hands. He would
put them up to his breast and then
thrust them into his pockets, first
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one and then the other.
"He huned pale and frequently
sipped water. Dr. Caldwell suggested
h t he sit down, and he reached his
hand back to take hold of the arm
chair sittingbehind,and began tosink
down He did not get into the chairbut
sat on the arm which caused him to
slide down on the floor. When it was
seen he did not get into the chair,Dr.
Srveeting caught him by the arm and
the house rose and crowded around.
"He was laid straight upon the
floor, and the Doctors exhausted every means to resuscitate and bring
him back to life. But, alas, all was in
vain, for he gasped once or mice and
his noble spirit took its flight into
realms of eternal light and glory."
Dr. Wall m'anied for the first time
at age 26 and after the death of that
wife from yellow fever in 1871, he
remarried. He was 36 at that time. A
third marriage occurred in 1894when
he was 58, and in less than a year he
died. It was said that the third marriage occurred so quickly after the
death of his second wife that Dr. Wall
had two mothers-in-law in the same
house with him.
First FPA Meeting
Little is known about the first
meeting of the Florida Press Association in Gainesville. A brief account of
the meeting appeared in Thc Florida
Dispatdt of Feb. 26, 1879, listing the
newly-elected officers and concluding with these words:
"The executive committee have in
charge the preparation of a Constitution and By-laws for the government
of the Association; also other business
of great importance to the press of the
State, all of which will be reported to
the members at the very earliest moment."
As will be indicated later, it was
some months before the first constitution wasadopted,and theHotherbusiness of great importance to the press
of the State" was not revealed, at least
not in the public press.
It would appear that the strongest
motive for the founding of the state
press association was for publishers
as a whole todeal with what they felt
were unfair tactics by advertising
'
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7he pressroom at The Florida Times-Union around 1900.
agencies. On Mar. 5,1879,l7~Floriak
Disyatdl of Live Oak, quoted the following item from rite Pensacola Gazeffc, which discusses some of the
frustrations the newspapermen had
with the agencies:
"Now that there is a Florida Press
Association, perhaps it will address
m'open lettef to the journalistic fraternity of thestate suggesting concert
of action as to advertising agencies.
Reasonable rates could be fixed and
the agencies would come to them, for
their patrons would not allow a whole
State to be left unworked in the advertising of their wares. etc.
"More advertisers would deal directly with the papers, which would
be better paid to say nothing of saving
the heavy commissions that the
middlemen exact from the paprsnot the advertisers. The assumption
of some of the agencies is of that radical and overbearing character which
is generally designated as 'cheek.'
"The first copy of one Newspaptr
Agency Directory that we saw or heard
of contained a statement that it was
authorized by every paper in the State
of Florida to make binding contracts,
and it also 'announced the 'circulation
of the Gazelle' as well as other papers,
and which was a mere guess and less
than the fact by a third. They send cuts
and stereotypes by mail, directing
publication at absurd rates, and place
the publisher, if he is very conscien-
tious, in the predicament of allowing
them to lose the cut [a metal plate on
a block of wood used for printing
illustrations] or paying postage to
send it back, or complying with the
terms dictated."
The editor of 77re Florida Dispafcl~
added a note to the above, saying:
"This is one of the duties outlined for
the Secretary and for the Executive
Committee-investigation as to the
responsibility of such advertising
agencies."
Jacksonville Meeting
The second meeting of the Florida
Press Association took place in Jacksonville on Mar. 2,1880. Members of
the association seemed to be concerned with two matters: the need to
rally support for a Houseof Representatives bill that would place printing
paper on a duty-free List and the need
to take action against advertisers and
advertising agents who failed to live
up to their contractswith the newspaper publishers. Both items were contained in resolutions adopted at the
meeting.
Other business consisted of adoption of a constitutionand by-laws and
the election of officers. Reelected
president was H.B.McCallurn and
Florida Living / August 1992
Capt. Charles Edward Dyke, of n
r
e
Tallahassee Floridian, was named vicepresident. The officesof secretary and
treasurer were merged and D.E.'
Elliott was elected to the merged position Named to the executivecommittee were: W.H. Babcock, newspaper
affiliation unknown; Daniel McAlpin
of 77re Rorida Bullefin, Live Oak; Jolm *
A. Whitney, Fernandina Express;
George Pratt, Palatka Herald; and M.F.
McCook, newspaper affiliation unknown.
here is no record
available that the
Florida Press Association met in 1881.
The meeting was
scheduled to be held
in Jacksonville in connection with the
Florida State Fair. Mention of this was
made in 17w Tallahassee Weekly Floridian on Jan. 25,1881, as follows:
"During the progress of the State
Fair at Jacksonville, this week, the
annual meetings will be held for the
Florida Fruit Growers' Association,
tile Florida Agriculture and Mechanical Association, and the State Press
Association These meetings are important, and it i s h o p d that theremay
be a-good number of members and
officers at all."
Lf the meeting was held, attendance must have been poor, since the
officers elected in 1880to serve for the
period 1880-1881 remained in office
for an extra term and served until the
end of the 1882 meeting. The other
possibility is that there was no official
meeting held in 1881 and the officers
continued to serve an extra year.
77re Florida Daily Tinrcs of Jacksonville reported on Feb. 25,1882, that the
Florida Press Association had met in
Jacksonville the previous day. Presiding was H.B. McCallum and the secretary was D.H. Elliott. The following
slate of officers was elected to serve
the association:
Captain Charles Edgar Dyke,
president; W.B. Babcock, vice-president; D.H. Elliott, secretary-treasurer,
and executive committee members,
G.W.Pratt, Palatka Herald; C.A.
Finley, Lake City Reporter; Fred L.
Rokrkon, Brmksville Crescent; J. H.
Ancnun, Hamilfon County Times, Jasper; and C. Codrington, DeLnndAgriculfurist.
At the 1882 meeting, members
Florida Living / August 1992
made a beginning at adopting some
professional objectives for the association. After discussing the need to
keep abreast of journalistic affairs in
the state, they adopted a resolution
calling for the president to designate
some member publisher to prepare
and deliver an address at the next
meeting on the subject of journalism
in Florida. The resolution also called
for the president to name a member to
respond to the address.
Two other resolutions dealt with
the old subject of the advertising
agencies. One resolution called upon
the executive committee to prepare a
list of advertising agents "who are
prompt and responsible in their
settlements with members." Members also wanted a list prepared of
those agencies that were not prompt
in their payments.
A second resolution asked the executive committee to prepare and
submit to the association members a
schedule of rates to be charged for
foreign advertising. "Foreign" was
the term applied in those days to
nonlocal advertising,meaning chiefly
national adveflising that came from
the agencies in the larger cities of the
nation.
No thought was given in 1882 to
the fact that such activities as ratesetting and blacklisting of the agencies that were not prompt in payment
might be illegal, as is the case today.
Charles Edgar Dyke, the new
president, was known throughout
Florida journalism as "the Nestor of
the Florida Press," a term denoting a
distinguished elder statesman of the
professioh. He was pften referred to
as n "walking encyclopedia of
Florida."
Dyke was another pastor-journalist. He was born in Stanbridge,
Ontario, Canada, on Jan. 24,1821. He
is believed to have left home in his
midteens after the death of his father
and made his way to Albany, New
York, where he learned the printer's
trade. He worked for Hoe's printing
establishment until he wtw 18 and
then moved to Apalachicola, Florida,
after reading an advertisement that
printers were wanted in the area.
His next move was to Tallahassee
where he obtained a job with Tlre Noridian andfournal, andonOct. 27,1849,
he and RB. Hilton assumed ownership of the paper from A.B. Maxwell.
In the Oct. 27 issue of the paper, Dyke
mentioned his own newspaper career
in these words:
"It will be unnecessary to say in
this connection that the paper, in the
hands of the present proprietors, will
continue to be, as it always has been,
the unflinching advocate and defender of the fundamental principles
of the great Democratic party of the
Union, as they have been handed
down to us by the Fathers of the Republic, as well as the fearless and
undisguised opponent of any attempted infringement of the rights of
the South, by 'my party, faction, or
State.
"Of ourself, however, we may k
allowed the vanity to say, that, man
and boy, some fifteen years of our life
has been spent in the discharge of the
duties incident to a printing office,
nearly nine of which have been
passed in this office. In this length of
time, we have served in all the departments appertaining to a Job, Book,
and Newspaper establishment-as a
devil [the first office to he filled by all
who seek to become masters of the'art
preservative of all arts'] as journeyman, as foreman, as junior editor of
Thc Floridian and lournal, in the editorid management, and business losses
and profits.
"We merely allude, in the off-hand
manner, to these features in our history by way of showing to our future
readers that we are no stranger to the
arduous duties we have voluntarily
assumed, inconnection with our associate on whom indeed will devolve
the larger share of labor in editing the
paper. In our new position, we hope
to render ourselves useful to our
country, our State, and ourself. We
expect toretain the patronage already
so liberally bestowed, and shall endeavor, with the hearty co-operation
of our co-laborer, to enlarge the
sphere of our usefulness by extending
the circulation of our paper (already
thelargest in the state) and by inaeasing our facilities for business."
By 1851, Dyke had obtained complete ownershipof thenewspaper. He
was embroiled in the politics of
a
Florida as few newspapermen were
before him, or havebeen since, 77lc
Weekly Floridian said of him at his
death, "Though most instrumental in
elevating others to office and having
the highest confidence of the people
as to his judgment in selectingproper
men for office, he nwer sought office
himself and declined high official positions in the state government more
than once tendered to him."
nte Weekly Floridian also reported
that he served as a captain in an artillery unit for the ~ o d e d e r a t ecause
during the Civil War, and at the end of
the conflict fought to prevent the sale
of West Florida to Alabama bv the
carpetbaggers while he was serving
as a commissioner of the state.
Dyke is reported to have attended
the National Democratic Convention
as a delegate in ,marlesion, South
Carolina, in 1860 and led the Florida
delegation out of the convention over
the slavery issue. Later, at the Southem Democratic Convention in Richmond he introduced a resolution endorsing John C. Breckinridge of Kentucky as president.
08
hen he was 21,
Dyke chose
Methodism
and shortly obtained a license as
ter and was known
a Methodist
as a "very
miniselo-
quent and earnest speaker." At that
same age he married SarahJ. 01'lver, a
Tallahassee girl. The couple had two
sons, both of whom died at early ages,
one at 23 and the other at age 31.
Dyke's wife died after the couple had
been married for 33 years.
In 1877, two years after his wife's
death, Dyke married Emma Winecoop, "many years his junior." Despite the difference in age, however,
the marriage was described as having
been "a lucky 8s well as happy draw
in the matrimonial lottery."
Because of poor health, Dyke sold
his paper in1883.He died Feb. 8,1887,
never having recovered from paralysis suffered when he became overheated trying to separate two bulls
fighting on his farmnear Tallczhnssee.
On the occasionof his passing, editor and publisher Charles Dyke received all the honor ordinarily accorded to a governor or other high
state official. Flags in Tallahassee
46
were flown at half-mast and businesses and government offices were
closed. Courts were adjourned so that
all might attend the funeral.
The Femandina Mirmr reported in
an editorial, bordered in black, that
"in business he was quick, liberal
and successful. In private life he
was gentle, considerate and just.
Florida haslost oneof hergreatest and
best citizens."
State of Journalism
The fifth annual meeting of the
Florida Press Association was held
Feb. 15,1883, at the Everett House in
Jacksonville. As directed by the members in 1882, two publishers opened
the meeting with lengthy addresses
on the "state of jotunalism."
Charles W. Jones,editorof '&Jacksonville Times-Union, welcomed the
newspaper publishersand then made
the point that a "newspaper that is
really a newspaper, or that aims to be
a newspaper, is purely a business enterprise, just as a hotel or a steamboat
line is a business enterprise. The public has not yet learned this. Newspaper men thenwlves are not as fully
convinced of it as for heir own interest they should be. But experience, the
one teacher whose lessons cannot be
ignored, is compelling acceptance
even from the most reluctant."
The response by George R.
.Fairbanks of 77le Femandina Florida
Mirror concerned the history of newspapers, the growth of the industry in
Florida from the days of territorial
journalism to 1883. He deplored the
desire of people for news of the "horrors that M
a
l
l our people." He continued: "They want all the details.
They become the most excitingof gossips, and the spread of a tale of horror,
which was first announced by twu or
Uuee lines of a press dispatch, in the
publication of itsafterdetaiis, spreads
like the comet's tail into infinite
space,"
Mr. Fairbanks added, "It has come
to be said that no prudent father of a
family camtake home a daily city paper until he has carefully scrutinized
its contents, there being so much published which is unfit for the eye of the
young, or of the gentler sex; and if
%
d l t for them, why fit for anyone?"
In the assembled convention. the
journalists passed a resolution of
sympathy in the death two weeks
prior to the meeting of H.B.
McCallum, the FPA's first president.
At the business session, Dr. J.J.
Harris of nre Sanfbrd Journal was
elected president and Charles H.
Jones of nu Jndrsonville Times-Union
vice president. D.H.Elliott was reelected secretary-treasurer. Named to
the executive committee were the
following: J. Ira Gore, Cedar I(ey Journal; R. Don McLeod, Tallahassee
Tallahasseatr; John F. Shecut,
Sumtervillc Times; George R.
Fairbanks,Fernandina Flonda Mirror;
and F.W. P o p , Madison New Ern.
Partying Questioned
By resolution, the association
members agreed to hold their sixth
annual meeting at Sanford, the home
of their new president. The Sanford
meetingwas especially interestingfor
a number of reasons. First, it marked a
departure from the policy of meeting
at the state fair. After the meeting,
President Harris stated inhis newspaper that the press convention was the
"largest and pleasantest gathering of
newspapermen ever assembled in the
state. . .justification of the policy of
removing the annual gathering from
the demoralizing influence of the
State Fair in Jacksonville."
Second,the removal of the meeting
from the Florida State Fair did not
change the complexion of the affair,
since it continued to be mostly a social
occasion The Sanford Journal reported
that the meeting began on Wednesday, Feb. 28,1884, with the arrival
of the paddleboat, The Qurttahoodl~c,
from Jacksonville "with the main
body of newsmen aboard."
The boat was met at Sanford with
the firing of acannon and the musicof
a brass band. Dinner was served after
welcoming s p e c h e and other ceremonies. A business session followed
until nearly midnight as the joumalists debated their new constitution A
banquet and more speeches followed
at the Nolan House.
On Thursday morning, the visiting
newsmen visited a citrus grove and
Florida Living / August 1992
.
under his presidency, as follows:
"The recent meeting of the Press
Some of thc early FPA presidents. Above:
C.O.Codrington (1916). Top right: Bethel
Tatum (1901). Lower lej: Gilbert D. laadr
(1921). Lower riflrt: Oscar Conklin (1916).
then departed as guests aboard the
South Florida Train for Tampa to continue their meeting in the newly constructed Tampa Opera House. The
constitution was adopted and a new
elate of officers elected, headed by J.J.
Harris as the holdover president.
At least one newspaper representative objected to the partying and
junketing, as reported by The Sanford
Herald:
"There was some argument as to
the worth of the meetings and the
Monticello Constitution wanted to be
enlightened as to the 'real objects of
the Press Association, other than socialreunions.'This feelingwas shouted
down by the other papers who felt that
the recent meeting of the Press Association promised to lay the foundation of great usefulness in the fuhue."
Other officers elected at the meeting were: T.K.Spencer, Tatnpa Tribune, vice president; D.H.Elliott, secretary-treasurer; and executive committee members: F.E. Harris, Ocala
Banner; Fred L. Robertson, Btooksville
Crescent; Mahlon Gore, Orlando Reporter; N.M. Bowen, Tallallassee Fioridian; C.A. Finley, Lake City Reporter.
A highlight of the meeting was a
hip to Beloir, "the most interesting
orange grove in Florida." A reporter
for 77te S~nford]ounrnl described the
junket this way:
Florida Living / August 1992
"Next morning (Thursday) on invitation of General Sanford, the
editors and their families spent an
hour amid the golden glories of
Belair-the most interesting orange
grove in Florida.
"There was no forbiddenfruit to us
in all this earthly Eden, and the radiant Eves who. bore u s company,
tempted us to pluck from every tree
and shrub its fruit and flowers. One
hundred and twenty-five acres, with
12,000 orange trees, groves of lemon
and olive, and gardens of famous
pine-apples, gathered from all countries to be tested in the soil of Sanford.
"It is the number and value of the
experiments in fruit culture now king developed at Belair that makes
this the most interesting grove in
Florida. Fruits from all analogous dimates are being tested in this soil,and
the experimentsare so valuable to the
futureof our fruit that we do not think
the sentiment inappropriate which
was voiced, when, at the d r d c h g of
the flavorous orange wine presented
by Rev. Lyman Phelps, General
Sanford was toasted as the 'Benefactor of Fruit Culture in Florida.'"
Commenting on 77te Conslitution's
query about the real objectives of the
Florida Press Association, J.J. Harris
wrote at length on the new direction
he expected the association to take
Association of Florida promises to lay
the foundation of great usefulness tn
the future. All classes of professional
men find advantage in the association
and organization. The bar and the
medical profession have their regular
annual meetings, and discuss matters
of common interest. The Press Ass*
ciation is composed of persons who
wield a powerful influence in molding public opinion and in directing
public attention to important movements, enterprises and plans which
affect the prosperity and welfare of
the pople of the commonwealth.
"It is well, therefore, that those
who fillthis important province in the
world of letters should know each
other personally, in friendly intercourse in which each derives some
benefit from the other. The personalities and invectiveswhich are the bane
of the newspaper press will be less
apparent when personal acquaintance shall have given respect and
regard.
"It will also contribute to elevating
the general tone of the press, its literary character, its condensation of .
thought and expression and a more
liberal treatment of opposing views.
"Each newspaper is apt to be too
.opinionated, and to meet opposing
views with sharpness or pungent or
personal criticism instead of force of
argument, moderationand gentle but
firm courtesy.
"In future meetings of the Press
Association we hope to see a business
' programme adopted, which will
bring out in brief essays upon appropriate topics, food for thought and
reflection. Brain food instead of mere
banqueting and physical enjoyment-a due mingling of tnte elements of pleasure-something which
will arouse our minds to vigorous
thoughts, and a higher appreciation
of our powem for good and evil. So
shall we make our annual meetings a
sourceof inspiration and enjoyment."
Powerful language for such a
fledgling group in its sixth year!
In line with these stated objectives
for its meetings, the association
adopted a constitution at Tampa that
said in its preamble: 'The object of
this Association shall be the promotion of the interests and amenities of
professional journalism"
J.J. Harris, President
JuniusJ. Harris,the third man to be
elected to the presidency of the association, was born in Washington
County,Georgia, Jan. 11,1834, the son
of Daniel and Vashti (Franklin) Harris. Daniel Harris was a North Carol i planter and Mrs. Harris was a
native of Georgia.
YoungJuniusdeveloped a taste for
"literary pursuits" at an early age and
entered Emory College at Oxford,
Georgia, after completing his public
school education. He completed the
four-course in literature, graduating
with high honors, and then began a
medical education He had "read"
medicine withDrs. Henry and Robert
Campbell of Augusta, Georgia, and
completed his medical education at
the Medical College of Georgia in
Augusta, graduating as valedictorian
of his class in 1855.
e practiced
medicine in
Washington
County and
Rome, Georgia, but ill
health forced him to @;e up a large
and growing practice. He moved to
Americus just in time to enlist in the
~ b n f e d e r a t eArmy and served
throughout the war as a private, refusing promotion to higher ranks on
numerous occ.lsions.
After the war, Dr. Harris practiced
in Srnithville, Georgia, until 1869and
then moved to Brunswick, where he
was hviceelected mayor of thecity. In
1874, he moved to Orange County,
Florida, and began a new life as a
citrus grower. He was so successful in
this effort and so popular in the community that he was elected to the
Florida State Legislature in 1876 and
re-elected in 1879.In the 187980 session, he was speaker of the House of
Representatives. He was again
elected in 1881but declined the nomination for speaker. He served the
same constituency again in 1883.
In 1882, Dr. Harris moved to
Sanford, Florida, m d bought 7%
South Florida Journal of that city and
ren,amed it 77ze Sanford j o u m l . The
paper was first issued asa weekly, but
in August 1886it became a daily, said
to be a "bright, spicy little daily" by
one of his biographers.
The new editor was warmly received by the other editors of Florida.
7 k St. lohn's Weekly expressed the
sentiments of most newspapers, calling Harris "a gentleman of fineeducation, a ready writer, and a fluent
speaker." Most newspapers welcomed him as a Democrat, however, .
The Indiati River News commented,
"He will prove a valuable acquisition
to the profession" 7% Putnam County
journal commented, "Hereafter the
paper will be conducted as a Democratic organ"
Dr. Harris's name f i t appeared
on the editorial page of Tlu SouUi
Florida Journal as editor and proprietor on Nov. 23,1882. He began a p
peals for subscribers to renew their
subscriptions,saying he proposed "to
make The Journal mutually beneficial
to ourselves and the people." The following month, he announced that his
daughter, Lula Harris, would be the
editor while he was busy in Tallahassee with his legislative duties.
Editors were somewhat in awe of
Harris's superior education and often
referred to his scholarly attainments,
as indicated in this statement:
"?& Journal ought to be a bonanza
to the man who can 'run a newspaper,' and we trust that our friend Harris will prove to be just that man.He is
a graceful writer who can clothe his
ideas in chaste and expressive language, a thorough gentleman and a
man of scholarly attainments. He is
familiar with public affairs in the
State; knows the needs of South
Florida; and his appearance and
knowledge will servehim a good purpose in his new field of labor."
The writer may have meant that he
had some doubts that a man of such
high "scholarly attainments" could
"nm a newspaper."
As a footnote on the times, it
should be noted that Harris reported
in his paper that he had received an
editorial chair as a gift from "Messrs.
Adarns & Haynes, Furniture dealers
of this city." Acknowledging the gift,
he said, "Gentlemen, we make you
our best bow; may you each, if you
want to, 'live a thous<andyears, and
your shadows never grow less.'"
In March 1887, Harris was appointed postmaster of Sanford and
Florida Living / August 1992
served in that post for many years. He
was president of the South FPA in
1883&d sewed on the executivecommittee of the Florida Press Assadation
for three years after stepping down as
the FPA president
Dr. Harris had married R.R.
Mitchell of Floyd County, Georgia, in
1853, and the couple had seven childrea He was aMaster Mason,anodd
Fellow, and a Knight of Pythias as
well as a member -of the hiethodisk
Episcopal Church South. Concerning
his editorial ability, his biographer
described him this way:
"As an editor he is one of the most
polished writers of the State. His literary attainments are of the highest
charncter. His writings bear the irnpress of a strong mind and a noble
nature. 1njoumahsm, he never stoops
to those low personalities that are so
characteristic of some newspaper
writers. As an affable gentleman he
has few equals. He is a man full of
noble and-generous impulses, who
always carefully guards, both in his
conversation &d through the columns of his paper, against wounding
the feelings of his fellow-men." 0
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102 NE 10th Avenue. Suite 6
Gaineevllle. Florida 32601
By JOHN PAUL JONES
7 T This is the second
part in a continuing
series on the history
of the Florida
Press Association.
ew Orleans
The seventh annual
meeting was scheduled for Jacksonville,
W
Florida, on Feb. 17,
18R5. President Harris, howcver,
called a special meeting for Feb. 11,
since the association had been invited
to New Orleans for the World's Industrial and Cotton Centennial Exposition. Free transportation had been offered by two railroads.
Fewer than a dozen members
showed up in Jacksonville. A brief
meeting was held there to pass on
member applications and elect a slate
of officers even though the slate had to
be approved in New Orleans at Chc
regular meeting.
JudgeJ.G. Knapp, Dr. CV.B, Bakock
and Dr. J.P. Wheeler were elected hono r q members of the association and
W.H. Simpson xvas placed on the retired list. Both the Savannah, Florida
and Western Railroad and the Florida
Central Railroad had offered to transport tile me~nbersto New C)rleans.
The Savannah, Florida and Western
was selected.
Members of the association, their
wives and children left Jacksonville at
7 a.m. on Feb. 12 on board a special
coach provided by the railroad. A Captain Tuttle of the Louisville and Nashville Railroad was scheduled to meet
them at Chattahoochee i u ~ dconvey
them the rest of the way.The party was
scheduled to reach New Orlcans at
7:03 on the Feb. 13.
On Feb. 17, nre Florida Tinrrs-Unior~
editorialized, "We infer that the
Florida Press Association are having a
good time. Accompanying them was a
correspondent of The Tinres-Union
who was instructed to keep us informed by telegraph. . . .When last
heard from, he and the Association
had reached Lake de Funiak. Afterwards they must have reached a country where liquid refreshments were
easier to obtain; and we are justified
in the inference that our correspondent at least is having a pretty good
time."
While in New Orleans, the Florida
visitors attended Florida Day at the
exposition, viewed the ~ a * d Gras
i
parade from a grandstand opposite
City Hall, and conducted their annual
mkting on Feb. 17, as scheduled, in
the Ladies' Parlor of the I4otel Windsor.
The following were unanirnorlsly
elected: Charles H. Jones, Jacksonvillr
Tinrrs-Ut~ion, president; John B .
Johnston, ~ n l d o ~ ~ d r c r t i svice-presier,
dent; D.B. Elliott, Floridn Di.s;tatdi, sccretaw-treasurer. Members of the executive committee named were: J.J.
Harris, Sanford Journal; George R.
Fairbanks, Frrnandirra rlorida AMirror;
F.E. Harris, Ocala Banner; Frank
Phillips, Pnisacola Advar~ccGazrttr; and
Mahlon Gore, Orlairdo Reporter.
A special committee was named to
select a badge for the association. On
the cornmi t tee were Charles R. Jones,
John T. Graves, and D.H. Elliott. Another committee of Florida publishers
met with editors from other states to
orgmirx a national press association.
Elected president of the new organization was B.D. Herbert of Red Wing,
Minnesota. Charles H. Jones, the new
president of the Florida Press Association, was elected first vice-president.
The Florida newsmen and their
familiesreturned home on Feb. 2Odter
agreeing to hold their 1686 meeting in
Gainesville, the city of their founding.
Charles 1-1.Jones, the fourth editor
to hold the prcsidency of the Florida
Press Association was born in
Talbotton,Georgia, onMar. 7,1848. He
was only 15 years old when he joined
the Confederate Army and served until the fall of Atlanta, when he was
transferred to the Confederate Navy.
At the close of the Civil War he was a
member of the Georgia Reserves.
From 1865 until 1881, Jones lived in
New York City where he edited magazines such as Appleton's Iortrnal and the
Eclrctic Magazine. He is said to have
contributed to many leading publications of the day and wrote two books.
In 1881, he moved to Jacksonville and
established Thc Florida Daily Titires, The
Tinies was consolidated with n i e lacksonville Union in 1882 to form the
present-day Florida Tinrcs-Union in
Jacksonville.
In 1888, Jones sold 77re Tii~res-Uniorr
and moved to St. Louis, Missouri, to
become editor of T i e Missortri Republican, later called 77reSt. Lorris Rr/vublicnr~.
Retween 1893 and 1897, he edited Tlic
Nncl York World in New York City, and
77te St. Louis Post-Disljntdr in St. Lollis
for Joseph Pulitzer.
He was a member of the World's
Columbian Commission and originated the idea of the Louisiana I'rlrchase Exposition in 1904 in St. Louis.
Ile played major roles in the Democratic Party in the elections of 18% and
1900 by writing the Chicago platform
for the party in 1896 and the Kansas
City platform in 1900. He was a kry
figure in the founding of the International Editorial Association in New
Orleans in 1885, and was one of the
primary leaders in the founding of the
American Newspaper Publishers Association.
The International Editorial Association became National Editorial Association at a meeting in Cincinnati,
Feb. 23-25,1886, and Charles 13. Jones
served as its president for the 1887
meeting in Denver, Colorado.
Mr. Jones married twice, the first
time to Elizabeth Cowperthwaite in
1871, and after her death in 1888, he
married L.E. Parsons in 1890. I-Ie
moved to Paris, France, and died there
on Jcm.27,1913, at 64 years of age.
Of all the presidents to serve the
Florida Press Association during its
first 50 pears, Ch,ules H. Jones was one
of the most distinguished in national
journalism.
Florida Living / !kptember 1992
Some New Directions
77
The eighth annual meeting of the
association was held in the "beautiful
new courthouse" in Gainesville on
Feb. 11-12, 1886. Tlrc Floridn TiitrcsUrrioir reported that "about hventy of
the old members were present 'and
twenty-one new members were admitted to membership."
This attendance did not suit President Charles H. Jones, who commented in his presidential address, "I
think you will agree with me that the
Association has not, as yet, attained
that truly representative character
which such an Associat ion should possess; that is, it has never yet included a
majority of those in the State engaged
in the pursuit of journalism. It has
seemed to me, if you will pardon me
for saying it, that ilnlcss we can enlist
in its active membersl~ipat least a majority of the journalists in the state, i t is
hardly worth while to maintain the
organization."
to reveal thcn~selvesto the world."
+ He called for the selection of a
theme for each meeting that was of
practical importance to the newspaper
profession. "This should be introduced by some member designated to
prepare a concise statement of his
h e w s upon it, the understanding being thatwhen his paper is readit is
then debated by the members present
with the view to rcacldna" conclusions
thereupon which shall be of practical
utility," he said.
-c He asked that the proceedings of
each meeting should include an opportunity for &y member to bring before
the convention any subject "that has
come within the r.urge of his experience
during UIC yearand wliicli islikely
- tobe
of interest to other rnernlwrs."
4 EIe asked that the association
adopt an official badge, "not a mere
piece of ribbon, which will tw thrown
aside whensoiled, hut a metal hadgeof
pleasing and appropriate design."
Lntcr in the mwting all proposals
were presented in the form of ,amendments to theby-lawsand passed un;mimollsly by the niernhership.
tlespite the fact that President Jones
p i n t e d to the practice of "junketing"
by members of the association as one
of tht, evils, he did propose that an
annual junket, or free trip, be taken in
connection with the May or June mccting. He defcndcd the srlggestion on
these grounds:
he new president rcviewed the histon. of the
association, pointinp
out that, in his twlief, it
had never bpen much
more than a social own.
nization, but that it had great potential
to serve the needs of the newspaper
industry of Florida and cvcry effort
+ "It is the regular practice each
should be made to help it attain s t ~ c l ~
year
of other State Associations to
an important goal. He spent niuch of
rnake excursions to some point of inthe remainder of his address proposterest."
ing ideas to sh-engthen the association:
+ ". . .Excursions cannot fairly be
+- He proposccl that the .annual
stigmatized as 'junketings.'"
meeting be held inMay or June instead
+ "To his general knowledge an
of February, saying Febnlary was the
editor is expected to aid catholicity of
busiest time of the year for publishers.
tone, and probably there is no better
+ He proposed that the program
way than by travel to acquire by perfor the meeting be "more interesting
sonal observation this knowledge of
and instructive." He suggested that the
other localities and people and the reby-laws of the association Ix changed
sulting catholicity of sentiment."
so that in addition to an address from
+ ". .and as there is no season of
the president of theassociation,another
the year when it is easier for Florida
address pertraining to the profession of
journalists to leave their work than in
journalism should also be required.
May or June,so thereisnoseasonof the
+ He proposed that a member be
yeiv when it is pleascanterto make an
designated at each meeting to deliver
excrlrsion say to W a s l ~ g t o n New
,
a n " h r r d Poem." "It is reasonable to
York, Boston, the Mammoth Cave, the
suppose that the Florida Press ASSO- Luray Caverns, the mountain region
ciation comprises within its rnemberof North Carolina, and similar localiship as many mute inglorious Miltons
tics, to which excursions might be arranged."
as any other, and the conatnlction of
I t was cle'u that the president was
the Annual Poem would enable them
.
.
trying to appease both camps of publishers, one camp who believed in all
work and no play, and the other who
believed in fun conventions onlv.
The Gainesville meeting revealed
that the association was not a wealthy
group. The treasurer reported a b'mk
balance of $70.30.
On the m o n d day of tlie meeting,
the members electedanewslate ofofficers hcaded by Charles H. Jones, elected
for a sccand term The minutes indicated
two dissenting votes, however. N s o
elected wem F.E Iianis, Onrln Bnirirer,
vice-president; D.H. Elliott, secret.arytreasurer; J.B. Johnston, Pasco Coutrfy
D n i m t , Dade City; George FairLunks,
Fcrnnndina Mirror; J.J. Harris, SaiI/Ord
]orrnml; J. Ira Gore, Cedar I<ry )oumnl;
and E.D. Oslin, Alloortn Rcgisler, memLvrs of the executive committee.
Bad Citrus Publicity
77
The ninth annual meeting of the
association was held in Fernandinn
June 15-16,1887.One of the first acts of
the convention was to elect the following new members:
C.E. Merrill, editor-in-chief, Tacksorraillc Nmv-Ilemld
A.O. Wright, J~ck.sonr~illc
Nma-Iicrnld staff
R. Welpole, editor, Sutnlcrville
Tiitrcs
I.J. I ialstead, editor, G~iitcsville
Record
T.W. Moore, publisher, Fcrnnndina
Mirror
S. Manucy, publisher, Fertlandiira
Mirmr
C.f-I. Pratt, editor, Pnlnfka Herald
n.8. Tatum, editor, ~ ~ r f 0 1 u ~ d ~ ~ f l t r c c Couricr
W.W. Breeze, editor, Tenilrerance
Alliailre
J.M.
Osborne, editor, Dayloira Messeirgcr
E.W. Peabody,editor, SntrfdrdArplcs
E.O.Painter, editor and proprietor,
Florida Agricultltrisf
S.W.Johnson, editor, Florida Agricullurist
W.D. Turnley, editor, Lake Weir Irldtpcndcttt
A.H. Manville, editor, Florida Dis;.afclr
Fred F. Heath, editor, Frrril Grortrr
A.R. Parish, editor, Higlilnrrd Park
Many of these persons worlld figFlorida Living / September 1 9 2
Hoclse, C i n c i ~ a t iin
, the decoration of
which, with buds, blossoms and flowers, we are greatly indebted to Mrs. A.
S. M w ,wife of delegate, A.S. Mann,
of Brooksville.
"A delegation from ttre National
Editorial Association was invited to
visit Florida and report upon the condition of its fruit industry. The invitation was accepted, and a delegation
appointed by the Association. These
were carried on a grand tour through
the orange production section of
Florida, and their report heralded
throughout ttre ~ ~ m d - t h eresults and
benefits of all of which can be accrcdited to the Florida Press Association."
Fairbanks President
77
Thr hliami Nrwa-Mrtropol~so/fic~*I~urlrltrr~
rrr 1(J2.371,rllr n linsrl~crll
srnrr l~c~nrdli~rrdriclr
hyslnndrrs ncmss flrc slrer! cutrlrl wctlrlt llrr ;iro,yrc5.scfn Itix Irn~rregnrrrc.
tue prominently in the affairs of the
association in the years ahead.
In his annual report to the membership on the "state of the Association,"
President Jones rcported a membership of 69 active members and seven
honorary members. Me paid tribute to
former FPA presidrnt, Charles E.
Dvke, deceased, in these words:
"One of these, Captairr Charles E.
Dyke, was twice the President of our
Association, was the oldest and most
honored member of our profession in
the State, 'and during the period of his
active work probably exercised wider
sway and a more potent idl~lencethan
any other journalist that has ever lived
in Florida.
"For some years prior to his death,
Captain Dyke had retired from the active labors of his profession, but his
name was still borne on our rolls as an
honorary member, and I well remenrbcr the deep interest which, u p to a
very recent period, he took in the .affairs of the State Press Association."
President Jones also reported that
he had been elected president of the
National Editorial Association and
would attend the meeting of that
group in Denver in September 1857.
He stated that Florida was entitled to
send four delegates, in addition to the
president and secretary of thc Florida
Press Association. He asked the association for permission to pay the membership dues for these delrjiates at the
rate of 25 cents each from the FPA
Florida Living / %ptember 1992
treasury. Concerning the Colorado
meeting, h~ said:
"In spite of the Inter-State Commerce Law it is believed that it will be
possible to arrange with railroads for
the tr,ansyortation of your delegates to
and from Colorado."
At the Cainesvillt. meeting in 1886,
Florida editors had been upset by tlre
had publicity appearing in northern
newspapersas a reslrlt of a hard freeze
in Florida, Theeditors felt theaccounts
had been greatly exaggerated and
Florida was made to appear stripped
of all its citrus, including the trees.
Secretary D.B. Elliott reported in
Fernandina how the ,second meeting
of tlreNational Editorial Associationin
Cincinnati had beenused to correct the
stories about Florida's citrus condition. His report said:
"nre next meeting of this Association (NEA) was held in Cincinnati, to
which the Florida Press Association
inshucted that delegates be sent, and
authorized their appointment by the
I'reside~it.The secretary secured transportation for this delegation to Cincinnati and return. The delegation arr,anged to make a display of f n ~ i t and
s
flowers at this meeting, to illustrate
tlre fact that the citrus family was not
frozen out.
"The secretary purchased the fruit,
paying therefore from the funds of the
Association, had it transported free by
the Southern 1:xpress Cornpimy, and
arranged in the parlors of the Durnett
New officers elected at the
Fernandina meeting were: George R.
Fairbanks, re'enrar~dinaMirror, president; F.E. Harris, Ocala Bartncr, vicepresident; and D.B. Elliott, secretarytreasurer. President Fairbanks appointed a new executive committee,as
follows: J.B. Johnston, Pasco County
Derrrocrnt, Dade City; J.J. Harris,
SnnfordJoltrnal; R. Walpole, S~orrtc~illr
Tinres; h?. Daniel hlcAlpin, Florida Rtrlletin, Live Oak; and C.E. Merrill, Iacksorrvillr Nricys-Herold.
Before adjourning, the members
took the following actions:
-+ Moved that at future meetings,
members be urged to bring their wives
and daughters. + That the nrxt meeting be in Key West and that the secretary arrange for transportation of the
members. + That an orator, an essayist and a poet be appointed from
among the memberstup.
L.C. Vaughn was appointed essayist, John Temple Graves was appointed orator and C.F. Merrill was
abpointed poet.
A committee on "outside advertising" reported that it had obtained
a ~ r e c m e namong
t
the members to the
following minimum rate for advertising:"one hundred dollars per colrrmn
gross, with the addition of 25 percent
for short time advertising, and double
those rates for reading notices, with no
professed position at those rates."
The committee further reported,
sorrowfully, that it had reason to believe that tire agreement had not been
kept by some newspapers and asked if
'
*Ihclllr~stratedIl,~ily' I ah t?f/ircv
111
hllntrri, 1 ?21. Note 1 1 1 ~ ~ srtl~scriplion
kly
chnrge-1.5
it should continue in its efforts to get
the newspapers to accept a minimum
rate. The report was simply filed without the question being answered.
Another resolution was adopted
asking that a law be passed "against
the circulation in this State of that class
of papers of which the 'PoliceGazette'
is a type." Even in 1887, this kind of
resolution seems rather astonishing in
the light of the First Amendment. A
second part of the same resolution
c d e d upon the publishers to "scan
more closely the matter of offered advertisements, especially those of questionable medicines; and caref~illyexclude all such as are calculated to offend in tlus direction."
The new president, Major George
Rainsford Fairbanks, was born in
Watertown, New York, on July 5,1820.
He was educated in Watertown at the
Watertown Academy, and in Montreal,
Canada, at the Petit Serninaire.\ h e n he
was 16, he entered the sophomore
class at Union College in Schenectady,
and was graduated in 1839 with a
cetrtrr.
bachelor's degree. He received his
master's d e p r ~ from
e
the same college
and then studied law.
h 1842. he was admitted to the
New York Bar, and that same year
became a Clerk of the Superior Court
of East Florida in St. Augustine,
where he lived until 1859.
ajor Fairbanks was a
prime mover in the
establishment of the
Florida Fruit Exchange, and owned
groves o n Orange Lake between
klicanopy and Ocala. He was at one
time president of the Florida Florticultural Society.
Fairbanks was also one of the main
promoters of the Florida Historicai
Society, serving at one time as its vice
president. He was an honorary memher of theNew York HistoricalSociety,
'and before and after the Civil War
lectured on American history at the
Univ~rsityof the South at Sewanee,
Tennessee.
hlajor Fairbanks learned Spanish in
order to study early documentson the
history of Florida. He helped found
Sewanee, and in 1859 built a home
there which was burned by Federal
troops during the war. He helped rebtdd the university after the war and
wrote and published its history in
1905. He taught at the University of the
South during the year and spent the
winter in Florida.
Fairbanks was made a major and
quartermaster in the Army of Tennessee, CSA, and was placed in charge of
hospital services Georgia and labama until the end of the Civil War.
I-Iisparole was signed by Secretary of
StateSeward, who had signed hiscommission as a coloncl in the militia of
thestateofNew York before hemoved
to Florida.
On Oct. 8,1842 Fairbanks married
Sarah C. Wright of Adams, New York,
whodied 16iearslater in1858.In 1860,
he married Susan B. Wright,
- his wife's
widowed sister-in-law.
In 1881, Fairbanks k a m e editor of
Florida Living / September 1992
the newspaper in his winter home
town, Tile r e n ~ n n d i ~ rFlorida
a
Mirror.
Comments on the new editor's perforniance were most favorable. It was
stid that hewas "gettingout oneof the
best weeklies in the state" since he had
eliminated advertisements from the
first and second pages and begun to
concentrate on national, state and some
foreign news on the first page and
editorial material on the second page.
Another one of his peers said,
"George Fairbanks. . .was printing a
progressive weekly newspaper in all
phases, and was receiving praise from
all over the South for his improvements in the paper."
In 1885, Major Fairbanks built a
large home in Fernmdina and put a lot
of his time and effort toward building
the community and state. Tire Florida
Mirror is one of the newspapers in the
family tree of the present-day
Fenrandinn Beach Ncuys-LcnLr, which
traces its beginning back to 1858 by
counting a number of mergers, purchases and successior~s.
At age 86, Major Fairbanks died on
Aug. 3, 1906, at Sewanee, Tennessee,
and was buried there. During the later
years of his life he had lectured in
American history at the University of
the South.
K e y West Convention
The association celebrated its 10th
year by journeying to Key West for the
10th annual convention. Members arrived in Key West aboard a steamer of
the Plant System, the Olit*cttc, from
Tampa on Mar. 6, 1888. They were
greeted by a brass band and a dozen or
more of the city's leading citizens.
Words of welcome were extended by
Judge James W. Locke, who commented on how isolated from the rest
of Florida and the United States the
citizens of Key West felt, "except when
it came time to pay taxes," he said.
he judge's messagp conveyed a feeling of bitterness for the manner in
which his island city had
been neglected by the rest
of the state, and expressed
his delight at the visit of ~iorida's
newspaper publishers, which, he said,
was an omen for the future.
This feeling of bitterness apparently had been brought about by a
yellow fever epidemic the previous
year, during which the people of Key
West had been quarantined. Some
newspapers to the north had even
pressed for the holding of all peopleon
the island at the point of shotguns, if
necessary.
~ u d ~ e ~ oconcluded
cke
his remarks
by saying, "The press is a power for
good, but we cannot deny that it may
be used as to have its good turned into
gall, its sweetness into bitterness. Hut
we have confidence in you, gentlemen,
and feel that in your hands the trust is
sale."
In his response to the welcome,
President ~ d r b a n k revealed
s
how irnportant he felt the newspapers of
Florida were when he said:
"It is the first time the Florida Press
Association has struck out from terra
firma and entrusted the third estate to
the broad waters, out of sight of l,and,
bravely risking the tremendous conse
quences to the State which could ensue
if we were all engulfed in the beautiful
waters of the Gulf of Mexico."
There followed other words of welcome and more replies before President Fairbanks began his annual message to tile members of the association.
"No matter of special importance to
our profession has occurred since our
last annual meeting," he said, adding
that, he would occupy his time with
some thoughts on the functions of
journalism. He emphasized in p e a t
detail that he did not believe the function of journalism was to provide scnsational news for depraved readers.
"First among the promoters of this
deadly sin is the press which fills columns with accounts of crime. There is
no need of this; there is positive detriment to society; yet it goes on without
diminution, this daily spreading for
the people their feast of bloody food.
Every quarrel, every assault, every assassination and murder, must be related in full, with all the circumstances
and minute descriptions of the actors,
and still better, if possible, with their
portraits and plans and diagrams of
the scenes of action."
President Fairbanks did not like
some sports news and the use of illustrations in newspapers. He commented on these matters as follows:
"There is also the base ball column
and racing coltimn, which takes the
placeof better and more judicious reading. To say the least, it lowers the standard of the paper which devotes an
undue space to special reports of base
ball games, horseracing and pugilism.
There is also a growing custom of using
illustrated articles. From the nature of
the case, these are inferior in execution,
often mere caricatures, and the subjects
largely taken from the criminal classes.
One has now to look for the mme to tell
whether the picture presented is that of
a noted murderer, a patent medicine
man, or a cabinet officer."
President Fairbanks concluded his
remarks by quoting a Mr. W. Rice of
Massiichusetts as to what a newspaper
should be:
"The ideal newspaper is one h t
shall publish thecorrect newsof theday
concisely and truthfully; shall not for
Kesiclmre in 7allnlrassr~of N. M. !Jorr!tn,
editor of'lhc Floridian and pmidrrrf o//lir
Norida Prrss Association in 1889.
Florida Living / September 1992
fear or favor withhold proper facts;
shall not criticise or expose, roughly,
matters of a private character, but shall
criticise boldly, and without s p ~ i n g .
hypocrisy, corruption, demagogy,
and self-seeking in public places."
?he following new members were
elected at the Key West meeting:
C.M. Sturgis, CIiurclr Year, Jncksonville
H.S. Allen, Nerv Sttrynra Brceze
S.R. Chapin, Gairi~srtilleDaily Record
Rev. J . Anderson, Satr/ord Clrristiarr
Adrfocate
J.M. Verence, Sattford Iournnl
F.\V. Merrin, Platrt City Soutfr Florida
Courier
H.J. Cooper, Tarnpa Jorrrnal
W.R. Carter, Jacksont~illeMetropolis
G.M. Mathes, Tatnpa Tribrtne
S.L. Bristow, LakelatrdFlorida Cracker
F.W .Murnby, ]ack.wrrville CIrurdr Year
A.S. Mann, Bnxlks~illcRgistrr
Ramon Rivero y Kivero, Tattrpa
Revistn rle Florida
Jose D'Poyle, Key Wesl El Yarn
Jose R. Estrada, Kry IVest Ln Propagarrdn
major conccrn of the
members at the Key West
meetingwas recent action
by the Florida Legislature which reduced the
rate allowed on legal advertising. "The
new rates are entirely inadequate to
compensate for labor and expense of
pubiishing," the members siid in a
strongly worded resolution. 'Il~eresolution called for the president of the
association to appoint a committee of
members to attend the "next session of
the Legislature, and endeavor to have
the law fixing the price to be paid for
publishing tax sales advertisements so
bmended as toprovide just and proper
compensation for the same, 'and in the
meantime to formulateannmcndmcr~t
to Ule present law."
At the end of the first day of meetings, George R. airb banks was reelected president and Col. 1.13.
Ancrum, publisher of Tlre Hnnrilton
County ~ i t n e sJasper,
,
was elected vice
president. D.H.Elliott continued as
secretary-treasurer. Members of the
executive committee, appointed later,
were: F.E. Harris, Ocala Banner; R.H.
hlcIlvaine, Cedar Key G u y Vimt?;N.M.
Bowen, Tallahassre Floridiatr; L.C.
Vaughn, Orlatrdo Scrrtirtcl; and D .
Redmond, Soltllrern Znrmigrant and
Cullivntor, Jacksonville.
When the sessions continued the
next afternoon, L.C. Vaughn, editor of
77re Orlando Scnlinrl, read a passionate
essay on the state of journalism in
Florida. He began by saying that
Florida had some 100 publications,
"thecirctllation of which exceeds hundreds of thousands." Commenting on
the technology of the press in those
days, he said:
"Since the introduction of the Press
in Florida, journalism has undergone
several revolutions and is likely to undergo more.?'heinvention of thecylinder press did as much for the profession, which now rules the world, as the
discoverer of gunpowder did for the
savage profession, that ruled before.
"The enormousextension of electric
wires and ocean cables have superceded the old correspondent, and now
the Washington letter, with lightning
speed, comes by telegraph. The account of a great battle fought yesterday in the Old World is read today in
our columns with as much accuracy
as it is in the community where it
occurred.
"Ln the newspaper you purchase
this afternoon you may read the
words, 'Queen Victoria spoke to her
Pculiament since the sun rose in Englanct, or what a Congress of European
representatives said and did on the
banks of the Bosphorus the evening
before.'The journalist now at one leap
takes the world for his province. The
question ~ . i s e swhat
,
will be the next
revolution? Our newspaper of today
presents as m'my topics of human interest as the human mind cares to consider. We will not have a greater variety or quantity, but a superior quality
of matter from the press.
"One does not desire to have great
'masses of undigested news' thrust
upon him, but expccts the editor to
select the salient points and present
them in readily comprehensible form.
In the past, the greatest expenditure in
conducting a newspaper was the
white paper; now it is the news; in the
future let us hope it will be the brains."
Mr. Vaughn concluded his essay
with these words, "Gentlemen of the
Florida Press Association, let not the
future of journalism in our glorious
state fall short of the lofty dignity of its
true station, even though society
should fall short in its dem,ulds; let it
aspire to a higher function than the
mere pleasing of the people. Let's refuse
to listen to the whispers and to move at
the beck of cliques .and factions.
" k t us f111lyappreciate our responsible positions with due regard for
truth and conscience. If we do this,
journalism in Florida have attained its
proper eminence .and glory."
Although C.E. Merrill of 7hr Jacksotrville Nrrus-Herald was named
"poet" for the Key West meeting, thc
annual poem was delivered by W.D.
Tumley of 77w Luke Wcir Independent.
The poem was a nostalgic, flowery
tribute to Florida and the climate, to
young love and courtship. A later
speakerhad this to say about the poem:
"The poem that has been so beautifully recited has also lent its charm to
this very enjoyable occasion; as I listened to the soft rhythm of its verses,
my heart itself was tor~ched.I felt that
if I were one of the softer sex, I could
not 'say him nay,' who wooed in such
a melodious voice." 0
Pnrf three of tlrr cotrtinrring Iristoy q/
earlyjorrrnnlisnr in Flnridau~illtrcprcsnlted
in our October issue.
:
;
-.
Florida 3--.
Memories a
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We welcome typed
ma~luscriptsdescribing
Florida before WW 11:
E-
3
5
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La.
L-3
towns. families, personal
expcricnce, businesses.
recreation. etc.
Scnd aeicles and photos to.
---3.
.+a
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102 NE 10th Avenue. Suite 6
Gainesville, Florlde 32601
Part three in a
series on the history of
the Florida Press
Association.
Uy JOHN PAUL J O N E
Railroad Advertising
77
@?
ithout automobiles
or any other fast
means of transportation except trains
and ships, Florida publishers in the 1680s used
trains and ships for their state meetings, as well as for regional and national journalism gatherings.
The transportation ~ 0 n I p h e Sapparently were happy to provide this
service free of charge, or in return for
advertising space, since the newspapers were important organs for building towns and increasing tourism and
population for the state. For the first
time at a Florida Press Association
meeting this arrangement came under question at the Key West meeting.
Early in the meeting, a committee
was appointed to address the problem and "bring in a suitable solution"
before adjournment.
The specid committee presented a
resolution which called for an end to
the practice of newspapers publishing railroad schedules "and other railroad advertising" free in return for
specific trip passes, the committee
asked that the railroad advertising be
done on a contract basis.
The committee went so fiar as to
suggest a schedule of rates for weekly
newspapers, based on circulation. A
weekly with a circulation of 500, for
example, would receive an annual fee
of 510 per square or 520 per column
inch. A paper of 3,000 circulation
would get three times that amount.
The records of the meeting indi-
Florida Living / October 1992
cate that no action was taken on this
proposal.
Another resolution, helpful to Key
West, was passed and ordered sent to
Florida's congressional delegation.
This resolution called for Congress to
release funds for the deepening of
the Northwest Passage at Key West,
saying such action "is of vital importance to the commerce of the Gulf
States, and especially to Florida and
Key West."
Announcement was made that
there would be a "vaccination matinee'' on Mar. 9 for those members
going to Cuba. The announcement
stated, "Dr. Porter will give a matinee
performance, introducing his little
lancet in a series of new and taking
experiments. All who propose visiting the Island of Cuba will find it to
their advantage to be present. Doors
open promptly at 12 o'clock noon."
On Mar. 12, in Key West, members
passed the following resolution before boarding theS.S. Olivettcfor their
return to Tampa:
"The Florida Press Association,
having visited Havana, Cuba, feel authorized to say that from all the &orrnation they could obtain, and from
their own obsenvation, there is no reason at this time why any person should
be deterred from visiting Havana."
This resolution was wired to The
Nm) York World, ThcJncksonvilleNcusHerald, 77fc Atlanta Coristitution, 77re
Savannah News, with a special request
that it be made special to the United
and Associated Press.
Thus, at the end of its first 10years,
the Florida Press Association had an
active membership of 69 members
from "some hundred Florida news-
papers." It had a constitution and
by-laws, setting forth tluee kinds of
membership: active, retired and
honorary. For active membership a
person had to be a proprietor, publisher or editor "of a newspaper
published in Rorida, and of such a
character as can be entered in the post
office for mailing as second class matter." Honorary members were described as "patrons of journalism
of notedlearning, ability and integrity
of character."
Despite the specifications for active memberslup, such publications
as 77teFlorida Baptist Witness, Thc Fruit
Grouter, 77le Agriculturist, The Clrurch
Year, and 77w Christian Advocate app e m d on the list of active members.
At the end of the 10years, the members had passed from operating primarily as a social organization, that
aln~ostceased to exist a number of
times, to one with a purpose that
sought to assist its members and bring
them "practical" programs at the annual meetings. Its chief concerns, as
evidenced by the resolutions passed
at meetings, were in the advertising
area and its members' dealings with
advertising agencies. The efforts of
the association to get all member
newspapers to charge the same advertising rates appeared to be accepted in principle only.
As was typical of the age, speeches
at meetings were long and filled with
flowery sentences that sought to add
passion, praise and principle to each
speaker's thesis.
Florida editors had high respect
and love for their profession, despite
the fact they lived in an age when it
was considered proper to cut one another to pieces in their columns. This
latter practice was discouraged by the
association officers, who sought to
bring a more gentlemanly approach
to the solutions of news and editorial
differences of opinion.
Reorganization
77
Between 1889and 1899,the Florida
Press Association sufferedmore growing pains as the organiwtion struggled
for some kind of satisfying identity
within the state community.
Annual conventiens were filled
with long discussions of the constitution and by-laws, and the provisions
panicked and fled to places of refuge
in other states.
-7
"There were more than 4,700 cases
of the fever with 427 deaths among
The association met Feb. 13,1889,
an epidemic population reduced to
in Pensacola but after a single session
membersadjourned that meeting and
about 2,000 people by the time the
then met in St. Augustine on Mar. 28
mass exodus was over."
Describing the quar'antine as so
to complele their business.
severe that towns outside of the JackThe shortness of the Pensacola part
of the meeting may have been due to
sonville area threatened bodily harm
the yellow fever epidemics that had
to those who ventured into their
swept Pensacola,Tampa and Jacksontowns, the newspaper went on to discuss the disease itself:
ville in1868. A columnist inlater years
reported that "the newspaper men
"Nothing was known definitely
about how yellow fever originated
could not meet in Pensacola, as the
troops guarding the city would not
and spread. One writer of the day
summed up a profusion of theories
have admitted them. So the meeting
was eventually held inst. Augustine."
regarding the disease: 'Some
As a matter of fact, theeditors were
thought,' he wrote, 'that it traveled
admitted and began their 11th annual
through the ground at a rate of two
convention in that city. At a morning
miles a day; others thought it came
business session members discussed
from the deadly miasmic vapors risa tax to promote immigration into
urg at night from the s w a m p and
Florida and the legal advertising rate
marshes.' It was generally believed
allowed newspapers for public notice
that the fever could be transmitted by
advertising. New members were
inanimateobjectsas wellas by people.
elected m d then the meetingrecessed
Everything was suspect, including
for carriage rides around the city and
newspapers, furniture, bedding, dry
an afternoon of sailing on Pensacola
goods-and even ice and hemy maBay, as well as visits to the naval yard
chinery."
and Fort Pickens.
As a result of these beliefs, quaranAttendance at the meeting was
tine stations were set up just outside
poor despite the fact that transprtaof Jacksonville where newspapers
tion was free on the railroads in
and mail from the city could be fumiFlorida. The meeting was adjourned
gated before being sent on its way.
and then resumed on Mar. 28 in St.
M.R. Bowden, The Tirncs-Uniot~
Augustine. Thirty-five editors atCity editor, died on Sept. 19, 1888,
tended and were described as "altofrom the fever. He had quit his job the
gether as intelligent a body of men as
day before to take care of several
ever convened in Florida at one time."
members of his family who were
Delegates met to "perfect the orgadown with the disease. Col. J.J.
nization," a calling of the roll with
Daniel, president of the Florida PubGeorge R. Fairbanks, president, in the
lishing Company, died on Oct. 2,
chair. Then came adjournment for
1888. Friends had urged him to leave
lunch and entertainment at the Ponce
the city for the mountains, but he rede Leon and Cordova hotels.
fused to leave his work. An editorial
President Fairbanks delivered his
in 77le S!. Louis Replrblicnn spoke of
annual address, dealing with the yelCol. Daniel in this way:
low fever epidemic of the past year
"By the death of Col. Daniel,
and the prosperous crops of the same
Florida loses its most beloved citizen,
period. He praised two editors of TIC and the world loses an honest and
Florida Times-Union, Editor-in-Chief
upright man 'and a Christim gentleEdwin Martin and City Editor M.R.
man. He declined nearly every office
Bowden, who died covering the "inin the gift of the people of the state,
fested cities."
and yet he wascontinually working in
In its Centennial Edition in 19(A,
their service."
rile Tirnes-Union discussed the yellow
Editor Edwin Martin died Oct. 8,
fever epidemic as follows:
1683. In September he had written a
"In August of 1688 yellow fever
friend about the danger involved in
broke out in the civ. Almost overcontinuing to work in the infested city:
night Jacksonville lost half of its
". .Of course, I fully appreciate the
population as thousands of people
dangers we incur here. . .but I had
Yellow Fever Intervenes
of these documents were changed
many times.
The extent of the membership was
a subject of much concern and membership committees were appointed
afresh each year to try to iron out differences. Some editors wished to limit
membership to editors and publishers only while others wanted to include their friends from the railroads
and other Florida business areas.
The push by some members was to
make the association a strong business organization that would present
a strong front for the newspapers in
business matters before the state legislature and the Congress of the
United States.
This period marked the first appearance of female members in the
association, although early in the
association's history members had
been urged to bring their wives and
daughters to convention sessions.
Decades passed before a woman was
elected president of the association.
Association members' deep interest in the growth and development of
Florida came to full flower during this
decade prior to the tumof the century,
as members expressed strong opposition to the abolition by the state of the
Bureau of Immigration and called for
the reestablishment of the bureau and
passage of a tax to support it.
The main purpose of the bureau
was to attract new residents to
Florida. Members of the press believed in promoting the state and
were willing to use their newspapers
for such purposes.
Beginning in 1889, the association
adopted a practice of holding a second state meeting in May or June, but
called the meeting an "adjourned"
session of the annual meeting held
earlier in the year. This "adjourned"
meeting appeared necessary to complete some business of the association
begun at the earlier meeting, p~rticularly the passage of changes in or additions to the FPA Constitution and
By-Laws.
.
Florida Living / October 1992
rather fail at the post of duty than Iive
with the consciousness of having deserted it. . . .I was called on the other
morning to visit some people who
were on the point of actual need for
food, and it was a privilege to hetv
them speak of how good the Lord had
been to them in time of trouble.
"I believe the scourge will result in
much spiritual good here in Jacksonville, and while I will not presume to
say that it is a punishment for our sins,
I can say that it has awakened in me a
deeper sense of my dependence on
God and of my duty to my fellow
creatures than I have ever felt before.
"I believe that if He spares me
through this epidemic, I will, with His
help, take a bolder stand for Him thean
I have ever done in the past."
Following Editor Martin's death,
711c rimes-union said, "He laid down
his life in this cause as truly as ever a
soldier fell upon the battlefield duty."
Prior to the epidemic, Martin had
developed a serious kidney condition
and had been advised to leave Jacksonville, since in his condition he
would be a prime target for the fever.
Instead of leaving, however, he sent
his family to safety and arranged his
own affairs in the event heshould die.
Topics up for discussion at the St.
Augustine portion of the 1889 meeting included the public notice advertising rate and libel laws.
Members thought that the advertising rates set by the legislature were
too low at one-fourth the charge for
regular commercial advertising. The
libel laws werecriticized because they
allowed "the small newspaper bearing no malice to be forced to pay excessive damages."
The second day of the convention
the editors passed a resolution calling
for the legal advertising rate to be increased to $1.00persquare and 50ccnts
for subsequent insertions. If time payments were granted by the newspaper, the editors felt an additional 50
cents per square should be allowed.
The Florida Press Association was
serious about theconvention poet. Dr.
R.H.McIlvane, editor of TIC
GuIfVicu~
at Cedar Key, who had been appointed poet for the convention,
died of yellow fever the day he was
supposed to deliver his poem, so
C. Mrrrill, editor of TIC]ocksonr~illr
Tlrncs-iferrrid, rrad Mcllvanc's porm,
"'lhe I~-gt-nd
of th(.Suwannt*c.R1vc.r "
A~!r:ertlsrngoficrs ofThe Florida Times Union i r ~]ucksor~villrin 1911.
President Bowen
7r
The St. Augustine meeting ended
with the election of the following officers: Newton Marion Bowen, proprietor of 71rc Tnllnhassee Floridian,
was named president; Mahlon Gore,
one of the owners of The Orange
County Reporter, Orlando, was named
vice president; and D.H. Elliott, editor
of 77te Florida Dispatch, continued as
secretary-treasurer.
Members of the executive committee were: J.H. Ancrum, Hamilton
Corinty Timcs, Jasper; E.O.Painter,
Florida Agriculturist; and Messrs.
Humphreys and Berlinger, journalistic affiliations unknown.
President Bowen was born May 17,
18.10, near Boston. He moved south
after the Civil War, residing first in
Georgia and arrived in Tallahassee in
1874, where he lived until his death.
He was employed as foreman for
several years on the old Floridian, and
afterwards, on the retirement of
Charles E. Dyke, became owner of the
paper. He was State Printer for many
years and "made a splendid reputation for his establishment, and for
himself and his partner, J.W. Dorr,
who was 7 7 Floridian's
~
editor, for
honest work and fair dealing."
In 1877,Bowen married bliss Bwefoot of Tallahasseeand the couple had
four children. He died in Tallahassee
on Qct. 13, 1905, and 77rc Wcckly True
Dcnlocri~t reported, "Newspaper
pwplr throughout thcStatcwil1 unite
in sincere regret to learn of the death,
on Friday last, the 13th inst., of Mr.
E.M.Bowen, well known all over
Florida as one of the oldest newspapermen. Mr. Bowen had suffered two
or more strokes of paralysis, and for
some time had been in very feeble
health. His indomitable spirit and
cheerful disposition, however, kept
him on his feet. making valiant efforts
to provide a support for his family;
and when the end came it was only a
short time after he had been on the
streets, making his daily rounds."
By the time the Florida Press Association opened its 12th annual meeting in Lake City on May 14,1890, a
swell of opposition to the way the
association was organized ):ad
reached the point where changes I lad
to be made.
A contingent of publishers, led by
Mahlon Gore, editor and publisher of
P i c Orange County Reporter, sought to
reorganize the association into a state
business group that would exist
solely to protect the individual newspapers in their business dealings.
Two aspects of their businesses
bothered them the most: a) they objecred to their fellow publishers who
constantly changed their advertising
rates to suit their own convenience,
cutratesand did whatever they wanted to d o to meet competition; and b)
they felt helpless because advertising
agencies could not be trusted to pay
theirbillsafter they had placed advertising, or sought to make Lwtter deals
by pressuring for lower rates.
A reorganization committee reported at Lake City that in the judgment of its members "the press association of Florida ought to be reorganized; that there is not enough time at
this meeting to formulate a plan for
such reorganization, and to arr'mge a
just and equitable scale of rates for
advertising, and to do all else that the
case seems to require."
The committee, made up of T.T.
Stockton, Mahlon Gore, F.W. Corr,
George R. Fairbanks and C.W.
DaCosta, was asked to report at the
adjourned meeting of the association
in Jacksonvilleon June 30,1890. During the interim, the committee was
asked to communicate with all the
newspapers in the state and seek their
cooperation.
The commit tee faced an enormous
task. Prior to June 30, 1890,it had to
devise a schedule of advertising rates
that would be acceptable to every
newspaper in Florida and write a constitution and by-laws to govern the
new association so strongly that no
member would be able to violate the
new rates without severe penalty. The
constitution and by-laws would, conceivably, lay at rest the long-standing
arguments about which newspapers
and individuals were eligible for
membership in the FPA.
The direction the adjourned meeting might take was foreseen in the
election of Mahlon Gore as the new
president for 1890-1891.D.H. Elliott
was unanimously reelected secretary
and C.H. Pratt of Palatka became the
new vice president.
New members elected at the meeting were:
1.C. Webb, Bradford County Telegmplr, Starke
H.R.Stoy, Tobacco Plnnt, Lake City
J . Russell Kennedy, Times, Palatka
James Dickinson, South Floridn
Progress, Ft. Meade
J. Ira Gore, Comrrtcrcial, Cedar Key
John E. Harris, Florida Focts, St.
Frmcis
Jefferson L. Davis, Taylor Cotrnty
Banner, Perry
M.F.Hood, Marion Free Press,
Ocala
Lucy Vannevar, {ounlal, Sanford
John Caldwell, {asper News, Jasper
E.J. Seymour, Nnrs, St. Augustine
Stephen Powers, Dispatdr, bnircr
and Fruit Grouper, Jacksonville
P.C. Drew, Sdlbal journal, Lake
City
W.H.Murrell, Boomer, Ft. White
W.I. Vason, Dispatch, Farmer and
Fruit Gnnurr, Jacksonville
Fred L. Robertson, Henrando Naps,
Brooksville
G.I. Metcalf, Indian River Nails,
Melbourne
P.W. Corr, Home Seeker, Gainesville
Prior to his election as the new
president, hlahlonGore set the tone of
the meeting and the proposed adjourned session in Jacksonville by advocating reorganization in his opening address. Gore said:
"It seems to me that our Association should arrange a schedule of advertising rates, by inches, based upon
the circulation and character of the
paper. That each publisher should
make known his exact circulation, so
that his advertising rates should be
determined, and that the Association
should provide and inflict a penalty
for any cutting of these rates.
"Such penalty might be expulsion
from the Association, and withdrawal of journalistic privileges, including exchange of papers with the
offenders. Then if we increase our
membership fees and a ~ u a dues
l
and work together to protect our interests and weed out the 'rats,' the
Florida State Press Association will
becomeausefulinstitutiontowhichit
will be an honor to belong.
"Our organization, as at present
constituted and conducted, is of little
value. General interests of the guild
are not promoted. Private interests of
members are not protected. We meet
once a year at a cost of a few dollars
and a few days of our time, then go
home and work harder and at lower
prices to reimburse ourselves for the
indulgence. No profession works
harder. No other is so poorly paid.
We are to blame. The errors are of our
own making. Will we perpetuate
them, or will we p p p l e with the
Florida Living / October 1992
evil and strangle it?"
The language of this address indicates that president-elect Gore regarded the press association as a kind
of union, or "guild," as he cdled i t the
major purpose of which was to serve
the members in 'an economic way.
77rc Florida Tintcs-Union reporter
who "covered" these meetings had a
number of observations to make on
the delegates and their various activities. "Editors are good smokers," he
wrote, "in fact, big smokers, and
Columbia's cigars were loudly appreciated by the good judges."
He observed that "Tom Harris's
forty-inch moustache tickled some
people owing to its size." Concerning
the newly-elected vice president, he
pointed out, "Chas. E. Pratt, the editor
of 7 7 1Palatka
~
Herald, is the youngest
member of the association, and his
election by acclamation to the vice
presidency, is a well merited compliment, and one that he appreciates. He
is as popular as he is handsome."
Referring to the members of the
association, the reporter concluded
his story about theconventionby saying, "The citizens here certainly enjoyed entertaining such a clever and
distinguished body of gentlemen."
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Part four in
a series on
the history of
the Florida Press
Association
the rnmd
By JOHN PAUL JONIIS
President Mahlon Gore
-ST"
.
Mahlon Gore, at the time he was
elected president of the Florida Press
Association, was one of the state's
most respected journalists, having
built nlr Orange County Reporter of
Orlando into one of the area's best
newspapers. He was born on a farm
near Climax, Michigan, Feb. 4,1837.
At age 15, he ran away from home
and apprenticed himself in the printing business with the Marshall Michignri Statesrnnn. By 16 he believed he
had mastered the business, and with a
desire to see the world, he went west.
During the next five pears he held jobs
in "nearly every town beh%ween
Detroit <mdthe Mississippi River."
Mr. Gore was a pioneer in journaiism in the Dakota Territory, and at
one time edited half of the newspapers in the territory. He married in
1860 and moved to Yanktown, Dakota, in 1862. There were only two
papers in the territory.
In 1864, Gore went to Sioux City,
Iowa, where he took charge of 77v
journal, the f i s t successful newspaper
in that city. The paper sold out after a
few years to George D. Perkins, and in
1874, with H.L. Warner, he established 77lc Tnbunc in the same citySioux City. Health failing, he sold out
that newspaper and spent the next
two and a half pears in Colorado, Kansas and Missouri, engaged in no active business but attempting to save
his accumulated funds since financial
reverses had overtaken him.
The spring of 1880 found him in
Kansas City in financial and physical
ruin.Hoping to regain his health, he
startedsouthand ended upin Florida.
hjahlon Gore's nephew, Eldon H.
Gore, mentions the Orlando publisher in his lustory of Orlando. Concerning Mahlon Gore's entrance inlo
Orlando he states that Gore arrived in
Florida in 1680 and found there was
no railroad to Orlando, so he went by
boat from Jacksonville to Sanford,
known then as Xgelonville.
From Sanford he walked to Orlando, taking hvo days for the journey. The first night was spent on the
road with a man who lived near
Longwood. The next morning Gore
was told to follow the trail through the
tsvoods and it would lead to Orlando.
Several hours later he met a man on a
horse and asked him how hecould get
toOrlando. EldonGore wrote that the
man replied, "You damn foo1,you are
in Orlando already."
Gore is later reported to have said,
"This was n1)r welcome to Orlando
and if any man was homesick, I
was, ,and would have turned back
if possible."
Even after he had been told he was
in Orlando already, Gore walked for
another hour before he spotted a
number of small buildings on the far
side of Lake Eola. Eldon wrote that the
city in those days consisted of a few
houses, a small wooden courthouse,
three stores, a saloon and a li\?eny
barn. The ~opulationwas about 200.
Mahlon Gore stopped at the Lake
House, a hotel and restaurant owned
by S.B. Haminston. Harrington also
owned 77rr O r r ~ r i Coirrlfy
~t
Rryorlcr, a
weekly newspaper which he had
bought frorr. hls hrether, Arthur
Harrington, and Cl-iarles Munger.
The paper had h e n founded in 1676
by Rufus Rtisscll who sold it when it
failed to pay. The result of Mahlon
Gore's meeting with S.B. Harrington
was the sale of 77w Rryor!cr to Gore.
Gore moved the paper from a onestory building on the southwest corner of Central Avenue and Main
Street to a t w o - s t o ~building on the
north side of the lot where the Angebilt
Hotel later stood. In 1884, a fire destroyed that building and Gore found
himself put out of business. Orlando
citizens came to his aid, however, and
provided money for a new plant.
Mahlon Gore became a prominent
citizen of the area. Between 1894 and
1896 he served three terms as mayor.
He was elected vice president of the
Florida Press Association in 1889 in
Pensacola and was twice elected
president of the association, the first
time in 1890 at Lake City .and the
second time in 1891 in Ocala.
Shortly after his election to a second term, hls health again began to
Orrrngc Colcnty Refail and he soldn~c*
porter to Samuel R. Hudson, a mem~
ber of the staff of i71cKa;~t:snsC I !Star.
He continued his relationship with
the newspaper as a contributing editor until his death in 1916.
Present at the Lake Cit?. meeting
were the following members of the
state press association:
J.B. Humphries, Manatee River
Journal, Bradenton
T.Mr. Harris, N m ? Capitol, Ocala
C.B.Pendleton, Equator-Democrat,
Key h'est
G.I. Metcalf, 11~dinvR k c r Ncuts,
Melbourne
John Caldwell, ]ns;wr Nncjs, Jasper
Lucy V,anne\.ar, lounial, Sanford
T.T. Stockton, Timcs-Unron, Jacksonville
C.H.Pratt, Herald, Palatka
N.Bowen, Floridian, Tallahassee
T. O!iver, Tobacco Plant, Lake City
H.S.Allyn, New Smyrna
S.R. Basset t, Lradrr, Kissimrnee
1. Russell Kennedy, Tirrzcs, Palatka
J.H. Ancrum, Tirrrcs, Jasper
J.lra Gore, Conlnrcrrinl, Cedar Key
James Dickinson, Soritlr Florida
Pro~rcss,Fort hleade
James R hlatthews Sentinel,
Macclemv
E.O. Painter, Agricullurisf, DeLand
D.J. He'utick, Register, Brooksville
I.C. Webb, Bradford Counly Tclegraplr, Starke
Fred L. Robertson, Hrmavdo N m s ,
Brooksville
P. Corr, Homc Seckcr, Gainesviile
S. Johnston, Agriculturist, DeLand
Charles W . DaCosta, Dispntcl~and
Fanner and Fruit Grou~er,Jacksonville
E.D. Oslin, Florida Facts, St. Francis
John E. Harris, Florida Facls, St.
Francis
Stephen Powers, Dispntclr and
Fanner and Fruit Growcr, Jacksonville
J.M. Rice, Sentinel, Orlando
H.R.Stoy, Tobacco Plant, Lake City
W.Breeze, Home Seeker, Gainesville
E.C.Moore, Nm-,St. Augustine
C.L. Bittinger, Banner, Ocala
M. Hood, Morion Free Press, Ocala
E.J. Seymour, N m s , St. At~gustine
John Frank, Pnblo Beach Brce:e
That 7 7 1Florida
~
Times-Union placed
special importance on the adjourned
meeting of the editors in Jacksonville
on June 30 is indicated in the following editorial that appeared that day:
"Today's incoming trains will
bring to Jacksonville the editors of
Florida en mass, prepared to affect a
re-organizationof their state press association upon such a basis as will
make it of practical advantage to its
members every day in the year. The
selection of this city for holding this
adjourned meeting was a compliment
to the metropolis of the state, which
her citizens fully appreciate, and they
sincerely hope that their distinguished visitors may enjoy to the utmost the forrnof entertainment which
it has been decided to offer them."
In a brief item on the editorial page,
nre Times-Union again pointed to the
importance of this particular FPA
meeting in these words:
"To-morrow's issue of nrc TirnesUnion will contain a full report of the
proceedings of the Florida Press Association, including the business
meeting in thiscity to-day, the literary
exercises at Murray Hall to-night,
personal sketches of the members,
and all the solid information and
small talk incident to the visit of the
editors.
"An extra large edition will be issued, and it will be of unusual interest
to the people of Florida. Newsdealers
who have not already ordered extra
Florida 1-ivine / November 1992
copies should do so at once.The reorganization committee met
the latter part of May at Ormond-onthe-Halifax, and after two days of deliberation drew upanew constitution
and by-laws for the association. This
document was presented to the membership in Jacksonvilleat the Board of
Trade rooms. The opening session on
June 30 was described by 771e TimesUnion as follows:
"At 395 p.m. there was a full house
at the board of trade rooms-members of the association, citizens, local
reporters, ladies, city. officials; railroad men, and 'the small boy,' who
always manages to 'get there' somehow. The association room of the
board of trade quarters was well
filled: nearly a hundred people were
present. Besides the lady members of
the organization, many wives of the
members were in attendance, and a
fine looking set of men and women
the press representatives of Florida
were."
In his opening remarks to the association, President Gore commented
on the presence of the ladies as follows:
"Ladies, our best efforts are made
in your presence in the inspiring presence and kind counsels of her who
works beside the men. I am glad to see
you here. We need you. weneed your
approbation when we do well. We
deserve your disapprobation when
we do ill."
New Constitution
Following these remarks, President Gore called for the presentation
of the new constitution and by-laws.
The document was read in full by T.T.
Stockton. It contained these provisions:
Article Two was worded in such a
way as to stress business interests as a
major object of the association. It read:
"The object of the Association ihall be
the advancement of the material interests and extensionof thesocial relations of editors."
Article Four on membership
closed the ranks so that only editors,
managers, publishers or proprietors
"who are actively engaged in journalism of a class which can be mailed as
second class matter, shall be eligible
for membership." Part Two of this
article said: "No proxies shall he allowed at any meetings held by, or on,
excursions arrangedfor this association."
The by-laws were sweeping in
their control over the membership
and the future conduct of the association. Applications for membership
had to be in writing, accompanied by
recommendations from two members. A membership committee then
reviewed the applications and passed
them along to the membership for
voting with the use of blnckand white
balls. Three black balls were enough
to deny membership. Each application for membership also included a
pledge by themembership seeker that
while the application was pending he
would conform to all the association's
rules and regulations.
Rule Fourteen of the by-laws
sought to force every newspaper in
the state to join up or loseall exchange
privileges. This provision read:
"From and after a period of three
months after the adoption of the constitution and by-laws, it shall be the
duty of the members to withhold all
courtesies of exchange or other journalistic amenities from all newspapers in Florida who are not members
or whose applications for admission
are not pending; provided, however,
that in case of new papers which may
hereafter be established they shall be
entitled to the courtesy of exchange
until the next annual meeting.
Rules Fifteen through Eighteen set
forth the controls the association
would exerciseover advertising in the
interest of the membership.
Rule Fifteen called for each member to provide the association'sexecutive committee with information concerning any questionable activities of
advertising agencies so the association could keep its members informed
as to which were reliable and which
were not.
Rule Sixteen stated that no member should pay an advertising agency
more than a 25 percent commission
and should never allow this comrnission to be paid directly to the advertiser as a way of cuttingrates. The rule
did allow publishers under contracts
at variance with the rule to complete
their contracts.
List ofFPA Constitution Articles contitrued in Dcccmbcr issue.
Part five in
a series on
the history of
the Florida Press
Miami Herald opce building in 1927on Soul11Miami Avenue and Second Street.
By JOHN PAUL JONES
Amendment listings continued
from November 1992
-
ule Seventeen required every member to provide the
secretary of the association with "exact advertising rates" for all classes of
advertising. It required the secretary
to publish the rates and required him
to make corrections in the listings
when rates were changed by any
newspaper.
Any publisher p i 1ty of cutting his
published rates could be suspended
from the association and after that no
member could extend journalistic
courtesies to his newspaper.
Rule Eighteen prohibited any
member from cutting his legal advertising rates or offering any kind of
rebate that would cause his rate to be
below that required by law.
Rule Eleven was one of the most
sweeping in its implications of all the
rules in the new by-laws because it
was an effort on the part of the members to police all members and even
try them in a kind of court session on
charges made against them. This provision read:
"RuleEleven, It shall be the duty of
the committee on arbitration to receive complaints of unprofessional
conduct, violations of these rules or
cutting of rates, and arbitrate differences between members, or between a
member and an editor or publisher
who is outside the association; to try
members upon charges which may
be preferred, and if such charges are
sustained to adjudge the penalty.
Appeals may be made from the
committee.
"Whensuch an appeal is taken, the
association shall hear evidence and
pass upon the case, the action being
final. When an appeal is taken, the
dedsion of the committee shall remain in force until the case is finally
disposed of by the association"
Through this rule the association
sought not only to keep its own members in line but to discipline
nonmembers by withholding "journalistic privileges" if they were found
guilty of unprofessional conduct. The
nature of the "unprofessional conduct" is spelled out in only ohe instance-rate cutting.
Further discussion of the reorganization was curtailed so the members
could catch the 5 o'clock ferry to Pablo
Beach for dinner and an evening
meeting of speeches and entertainment. The ferry left with about 100
persons on board, half of them wives
and friends of the editors.
A three-car train picked them up
on the other side of the St. JohnsRiver
to take them to Murray Hall at Pablo
Beach. After dinner the editors met in
the hotel's billiard room at 835 for the
evening meeting.
The first order of business was the
reading of the new members' names:
John G. Collins, Talluhassean,Tallahassee
James H.C.Pratt, Herald, Palatka
Phillip Isaacs, Chronicle, Oviedo
W.B. Hill, Enterpn'K, New Troy
A. Hewitt H
ill,&kc Region, Eustis
J.H. Hamilton, Messenger, St.
Andrews
George P.E. Hart, Blah, Belleview
James S. Gardiner, Times-Courier,
Marianna
John Cross, Orange Grove,
Liverpool
Sallie E. Cummings, Times,
DeFuniak
J.C.
Clay, Star, Mannfield
Eugene S. Matthews, Indcpendmt,
Foster Park
Annie Hood, Witness, Ocala
A.P. Williamson, Phosphate Field,
Floral City
J.L. Harlow, Messnger, Pasadena
George E. Miles, Star, Mannfield
A.A. Armington, Register, BrooksvUe
RM. Andrews, Public Spirit, Cocoa
Florida Living / January1593
Solon A. Adarns, Jacksonville
John C. Witt, News, Pensacola
C.N.S. Wilson,Admcate, Manatee.
George N. Truax, Truth, Tarpon
spring
M.D. Randall, Green Cove Springs,
Green Cove Springs
M.S. Stovd, Times, Surnterville
J.A.K. Stevens, Caurier-Infirmant,
Bartow
F.H. Stout, Pnss, Fort Myers
W.R. Shields, Alliance Farmer,
Selma
Alex Rarnsey, Vindicator, Mount
Pleasan
F.J. Pepper, Arendiun, Arcadia
C.E.Harris, Tribune, Tampa
W.C Gum, Adwcnte, Tampa
L.J.J. Nteuwenkamp, Advocate,
Lakeland
H. Johnson Times, Apaiachicola
John N. Jolly, Journal, Daytona
E.B. Bughardt, Courier, Wildwood
B.E. Prevatt, h a r d , DeLand
H.V. Sevier, Tirncs-Union, Jacksonville
B.H. Eldridge, N e w , DeLand
Henry Marcotte, Times-Union,
Jacksonville
John C. Trice, Tallahasscan, Tallahassee
W.W. Keep, Herald, Quincy
A.C. Turner, Times, Clearwater
W.B. Helvenston, Banner, Live Oak
A.C Vance,Record, Orlando
J.H. Stoney, Times, Orange City
RS.Nelson, Breeze, New Smyrna
Chas. A. Choate, Tallahassee
Monthly Bulletin, Tall*
A.B. Small, Jasper Nnas, Jasper
C.E. Menill, Standard,Jacksonville
L.B. Plumer, Congregationalist,
Jacksonville
D. Redmond, Farmer and Fruit
Gnnucr
James L Crabbe, Standard, Jacksonville
The rehun to Jacksonville was accomplished by 8:15 on July 1for a 915
meeting at which time the remaining
provisions of the constitution and bylaws were discussed and approved
with minor changes. Adjournment
came at 4 9 p . a and at 6:30 p.m.
about 50 editors and their wives left
on the S.F. & W. train for Chattanooga,
Tennessee, to attend the meeting of
-. the National Editorial Association.
On July 2 7 1 Florida
~
Times-Union
paid tribute to the members of the
association in an editorial, "A Work
Florida Living / January1993
Well Done." The editorial said, in
part:
"Congratulationsare in order. The
Florida State Press Association has
done its work well. As an organization of the newspaper publishers and
editors of Florida for mutual benefit
and mutual protection, it will henceforth be of great service to them in the
conduct of their business.
'w
he" have come to
unherstand each
other as they nwer
did before, and these relationskll not
only strengthen the professional tie
and prove to be of material aid for the
present, but they will enable the assaciation to better grasp its opportunities as they may arise in the f uture and
to so direct matter of legislationaffecting the newspaper business that the
best possible results may be secured
from the great expenditure of time
and money and effort which its prosecution necessatily entails.
"At any rate, the association is
stranger than it ever was before, and
must of necessity make it a power in
the state.
"The new constitutionand by-laws
were adopted with little friction It
goes without saying that the press of
the state will watch matters very
closely, and see to it that every regulation is rigidly enforced. Otherwise,
these new instruments will prove to
be only a rope of sand, and no good
can come of the new union.
"Every editor and newspaper in
Florida should now come into the f old
and help to make the assodationwhat
it should be-a business organization. 7 k Timcs-Union is very hopeful
of good results to flow from
yesterday's deliberations."
n u Times-Union gave thisconvention of its fellow editors and publishers columns of space, including photographiccoverage.From time to time
the paper referred to coverage of its
"kodak editor," indicating that in
1890 the word "kodak" was used instead of photo or camera.
Part of 77u Times-Union coverage
consisted of numerous biographical
sketches of important individuals at
the convention. The biography of the
newly elected vice president is noted
at this point because of his youthful
age to be holding such a statewide
position. He was 26.
Charles W. Pratt, FPA vice president, was born in Gadsden County,
Florida, Nov. 18,1864, the third son of
George W. Pratt, a member of the
association's first executive committee. He moved to Palatka with his
family in March 1869. His first active
journalistic work was in Leesburg,
Florida, where, at the age of 18,on the
death of his brother-in-law, C. L.Thcmas,he edited The Sumter County Adwnae for five weeks, at the same time
doing all the mechanical work.
At the time of his election to an
officein the Florida Press Association
he was correspondentfor a number of
"leading newspapers in the South,"
and for three years had been armdate
editor for Florida for The National EditorialJournalist. He was wellknown in
his area for a personal column,
"Pratt's Prattlings," in nlc Herald at
Palatka.
During the yellow fwer epidemic
of 1888,he changed The Palatka Herald
into a daily, at a time which "seemed
most unpropitious for such a venture," said The Times-Union. The
newspaper went on to say that Pratt
succeeded with his daily through
untiring energy and perseverance.
In September 1889, Chas. H. Pratt
C Bro. formed a co-partnership with
Pratt Bms. of Leesbur~,purchased
Thc Palatka News, discontinued it, and
at the time of the FPA convention of
1890 were editors and proprietors of
Thc PaIatka Daily and Weekly Herald
and Thc Lecsburg Gmmercial.
Prior to the opening of the 1891
annual convention at Ocala on Jan.14,
Thc Times-Union emphasized the irnportance of the reorganization of the
association In an editorial entitled,
"The Florida Press," it stated:
"Today the Florida Press Association meets in Ocala-the city of conventions-for a three-day session.
This is the first annual meeting to be
held under the new constitution by
the revivified assodation. The association was rapidly declining in interest and influence when the editor of
Thc Orange County Reporter gave it a
"brace" last spring just prior to the
Lake City meeting. The result was a
plan of reorganization, which was
perfected at the meeting in Jacksonville last July.
"This was only the beginningof the
work-the initialstep.President Gore
is the personification of the idea that
-
the press association in this state
ought to be something or nothingand he is on the side that should make
it something. If all the members of the
association make it a point to attend
the first meeting, the progress, usefulness, value and influence of the association will be assured. The work
must not be left to a few. The interest
and the effort must be general.
Ocala Meeting
-
The Florida Press Association's
fist session of the Ocala meeting, beginning at 4 p.m. in the reading roam
of the "OcalaRifles," was attended by
only 18 editors when President
Mahlon Gore rapped for order. More
delegates were expected on the night
train and more did arrive in time for
the evening wssion in the parlor of
the Ocala House. Highlight of the
evening was the address by Mr.Gore.
Two other events drew newsmen
to Ocala for this particular convention, the FarmersAlliance Exposition
and the 'Blue and G r a y reunion. It
was reported that more than 1,000
"excursionists" were on hand for the
Blue and Gray convention
Despite the small attendance at the
opening FPA session, Ocala's mayor,
Major R.L.Anderson, delivered a stirring welcome that reflected somewhat the high esteem in which the
press was held by ~ith3'lS
of the day,
particularly offidals. He said, in part:
"We feel it an especial honor to be
thus pennit ted to open our portals for
the reception of such distinguished
and intelligent guests. The press is
truly the embodiment of the wisdom
and enterprise and progress of the
age. . . .The press fights the great,
tremendous battle of politics. It combats sin and is the vehicleof the gospel
and wages the warfare of the church
militant.
"It is the vanguard in the army of
occupation which moves on and subdues the wilderness of the great West
and South. It is the friend and support
of the family circle and the vigilant
and alert guide of the citizen. . . .The
citizenmust be made to think,and the
newspaper is the force which shall
teach, and it is teaching the citizen to
do so. . .for words are things, and a
small drop of ink falling like dew
upon a thought, produces that which
makes thousands, perhaps millions,
think."
In his annual "state of the press"
speech, President Gore continued to
support the thesis that the press
ciation had taken the right track in its
reorganization. In his ~troductionhe
paid tribute to a fellow editor, Henry
C. Vance of The Orlanda k r d , who
had died during the year. Part of the
mission of the k i a tion in meeting
in Ocala was to examine the phosphate mines a i d learn about phosphate and its impact on Florida.
Concerning the discovery of this
substance, President Gore said, "We
are led to believe that our wealth of
climate and fruits is to be eclipsed by
a vastly morevaluableminerai wealth
which had never been dreamed of
until within the past year."
-
ore went on to point
out the superiority of
journalists over the
phosphate businessman
by stating:
"1t is pa* of our h i o n to gleanaIl
the facis obtainable, as t6ey are
brought to light and give them to the
world. It is a work of love and patriotism which brings no reward to no
other than that which comes of doing
good.
"The information which we will
disseminate will put thousands of
dollars into the pockets of men who
will forget the source from which it
comes. But there is a bit of compensation for us in the reflection that in the
great hereafter to which we are going,
we can take with us the conscious
assurance that we have unselfishly
contributed to the advancement and
development of the world, while the
other fellow can take with him neither
phosphate nor dollars to give him a
reflected importance.
"We may well be willing to risk our
record of work accomplished against
his selfish forgetfulness and feel assured that infinite wisdom will place
the jewels where they belong."
President Gorecalled the libel laws
of Florida "a disgrace to the state." He
said, "No paper can truthfully report
a transaction as a matter of news, in
which an individual may happen to
figure in a disreputableway, without
being liable to a suit for damages, or
even a criminal prosecution
"There are a few men in the state
who favor this gag law, and who will
do all in their power to perpetuate this
iniquity." He proposed that the association 'prepare an address to the
state legislature asking that the
muzzle be removed and placed on the
man who is ashamed to have his acts
brought out into the fulllight of God's
blessed sunshine."
As the Ieader of the state press,
Gore's opinions about advertising
and the newspaper bushes as practiced in the last decade of the 19th
century in Florida are worth noting.
He dealt at length on these matters in
his annual message:
"The regulations concerning advertising and advertising sates
adopted by our association have already proven of advantage to us. Foreign advertisers are coming gracefully to our terms, while the wisdom
and justice of our actions are recognized and approved by home patrons.
'All men like a square deal, and
like to do business with those who do
not need watching, who deal with all
alike, and who are governed by rigid
business rules. The man who dernoralizes his own business has no right to
find fault if he is not appreciated in his
own town
"It will be better for us, and more
profitable to advertisers if instead of
spending time figuringona reduction
of our rates, in their cause, we employ
our talentsin makingour papers more
meritorious and more valuable to advertisers as well as readers.
'The paper which will take the
advertisement of a businessman for
the least amount of money is not always the cheapest paper to advertise
in With a wise business man an advertisement is an investment which is
expected to return a profit. It is expected to bring customerswho would
not come otherwise.
There is a difference in customers
also.Some are very desirable. Others
are not. To place an advertisement
where it will be read by the greatest
number of desirable customers, and
where a given amount of money expended will bring the greatest volume of business, is where the science
of advertising comes in.
"Five dollan in a widely drculated
paper will bring more business thana
whole broadside in-another whose
circulation is limited to a singleschool
district All newspaper managers are
Florida Living / Januaxy1993
.
greedy for fint class advertisements,
but shrewd businessmen soon learn
to look with some disfavor upon the
paper that offers special inducements
on half pages and whole page loudly
displayed ads.
"A really good paper dixourages
'loud' advertisements, because its
manager understands that the public
regards such exhibitionsas it does the
claims of loud talkers. Advertisements to be winning must be 'newsy
just as much as any other department
of the paper.
"They should deal in facts which
the customer will find to be veritable
facts when he investigates. They
should be candid, crisp and truthful
so as to create and leave pleasant impressions in the minds of readers and
purchasers.
"If a merchant advertises 'great reduction in prices8with a mental reservation at the time that he will add
enough to the regular price of his
wares to reimburse him for the cost of
his advertising,a dixriminating public will discern the fraud, and will
forever after regard his advertisement withsuspicion Such a merchant
will inevitably reach the final conclusion that advertising does not pay.
Advertising does."
Gore spent an equal amount of
time in his address on the need for
Florida to promote its resources
through advertising saying, 'The
subject of immigration is one which
may well commend itself to the favor
of the association The future development of Florida and, incidentally,
the success of each one of our papers
depends largely upon the influx of
people and capital to our stab."
He pointed out that the Florida tax
of o n ~ i g h t hof one mill to support
the Bureau of Immigration, charged
with promoting new residents, was
pitifully small. Hecalled for the tax to
be raised to one or two mills on the
dollar.
Concerning further promotion to
place Florida before the eyes of the
nation, he suggested:
"It is always pleasant to combine
pleasure with business. In direct lime
of these ideas I would suggest that the
Florida Press Association arrange an
excursion into the West during the
month of June next. That a c o d t t e e
be selected at this meeting to arrange
for transportation for the party and
Florida Living / January 1993
for a car of Florida exhibits; that members who go take their wives with
them, and that the trip be made one of
pleasure and relaxation on the one
hand, and a great advertisement for
Florida on the other; that the pilgrimage embrace the iron regions of Alabama, the cotton-growing - regions of
western Tennesseeand easternArkansas, and extend as far as the vast grain
fields of the Missouri River region."
President Core's final words indicated that all was not going as well as
hoped with the new rules of the association. Some members had dropped
out and other prospective members
had failed to join. Like a football
coach, Gore spoke with enthusiasmof
the new program, however.
"The citizen must be
made to think, and the
newspaper is the force
which shall teach, and
it is teaching the
citizen to do so."
"It is but little more than six
months since our association was reorganized and commenced business
on anew basis.It is to be regretted that
even one or two of our valued members have fainted and fallen by the
wayside; without giving the new
principles a fair and new test.
"There can be no doubt that we are
on the right track. Firmness and consistency will surely bring the victory.
Let us maintainour ground and stand
by the everlasting principles of justice
until those who live by fleecing us
acknowledge our supremacy and the
righteousness of our action, and until
every press assodation in America
shall take knowledge of us and fall
into l i e with us."
Eighty-five FPA delegates, many
of whom were women, spent most of
the finalday of the conventiontouring
the phosphate mines at Dunnellon
There was a banquet of wild game at
the Homosassa Inn before the group
returned to Ocala for a final business
meeting at which Mahlon Core was
reelected president. C.B. Pendleton,
Equator-Dcmocraf, Key West, was
named vice-president, and D.H.
Elliott was reelected secretary-treasurer. Thc Ocala Banner listed the following editors in attendance at the
convention:
Mahlon Gore,Rrportcr, Orlando .
D.H. Elliott, St. Augustine
Charles A. Choate, Agricultud Bulletin, Tallahassee
J.C.
Webb, Telegmph,Starke
LJ. B m b y , &nstituHon, Monticello
Capt. J.B.Johnson and Clifford H.
Johnson,Dmocrat, Dade City
George E.P. Hart, Blade, Belleview
Guy and W.J. Metcalf, News,Indian
River
C.H. Pratt, Herald, Palatka
J.H. Hurnphries and wife, Manatee
Riuer Journal
Mn. Lucie Vannevar, F.A. Mann,
O u s t Gazette, h o n d
W.B. Hill, Enfcrprise,New Troy
A.C. Turner, West Hillsborough
Tima, Clearwater Harbor
Wi C. Shugart, Graphic, DeFuniak
SP*P
Rev.L D. Plummer, Southern Congrtgationdist, Jacksonville
C.B. Pendleton. Equator-Democrat,
Key West
S.R. Bassett, wife and daughter,
Leader, Kissimmee
WS. Turner, R o d City Publishing
Co.
J. Edward !?trother, Standard,
W. W. Keep, Herald, Qutney
Charles DaCosta, Florida Dispatch
Major George Fairbanks, Mirror,
Femandina
N. M. Bowen, wife and daughter,
Floridian, Tallahassee
T.T. Stockton, Times-Unh, JacksonviUe
Col. CE Merrill, Stundard, Jacksonville
W.T. Randall, Gmn Coue Springs,
Green Cove Springs
This list of 34 delegates, including
same wives and daughters,probably
is an accurate list of those attending
the 1891 meeting in Ocala, although
newspapers reported that "110 places
were laid" for a Citizen's Dinner
given the press by Ocala residents at
the Ocala House on the first night of
the convention. Those served, however, included a number of Ocala officials, wives and friends, as well as
some officials of the exposition and
the "Blue and Gray" gathering. 0
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and third, the editors liked to talk
about themselves as a poor, but
proud, minority group in the state.
In his annual address, Resident
Pendleton spoke about the advertising problems. He said, 'Then the subject of advertising presents itself. We
should get more for our advertising
spare We should not sell it to agents
and cooperative newspaper concerns
for little or nothing as many of us are
now compelled to do, under the present condition of affairs in the state."
The editon had strongly urged
members of the Florida legislature to
votestatehrnds for a Florida exhibit at
the Columbian Exposition in Chicago. On this matter, President
Pendleton commented:
'Yes, Florida with her memories of
Columbus and the Spanish regime,
and Chicago with her present tribute
to him, are names to concur with! Yet
I see that of a l l the states, Florida is the
most poorly reprmted; I s e that her
lawmakers in council assembled
refuse even a tardy and beggarly pittance to do honor to the one that
Florida has more claim to than all
other Americans besides."
r. Pendletonwent on to
stress how important
the newspapers were
to the citizens of ~lorid=in
interpreting the activities of the Florida legislature and recommended that a standing committee of three be appointed
to provide the press of the state with
suggestions for 'legislative reform,
and laws and constitutional amendments for dixussion" He admitted
that the newspapers of the state did
cover some legislative news but he
said it was done in a 'general way, in
a kind of 'fitful dream."
What President Pendleton suggested was something entirely new in
the newspaper world. He wanted the
editors to get involved in the lawrnakingprocess and he wanted them to do
a better job of telling the people of the
state what went on in the legislative
chambers in Tallahassee.
Near the end of his address, the
FPA president painted in bitter
strokes the plight of the country editor with these re&ks:
'It is said that the country newspaper, like the Methodist itinerant
preacher, is the harbinger of avilization, and like him is the next poorest
Florida Living / February 1993
paid for all hard workers. The Country Editor should be placed last, for he
doesn't even get the 'yellow-legged
chiden.'
"The parson makes no enemies
and lives well; the editor fights the
battles of the politicians who usually
give him the go by (all except Uncle
Grover); swears by the town in which
his paper is located; says of all brides
'that they are the most beautiful,' even
writes pleasant things of the groom
who is two years in arrears and also
the father of the bride, who is, possibly a town councilman who has just
voted to give the newspaper, which
has been started to break him down,
the public printing.
'He writes and works for the
party; whips the voters in under pleas
that oftentimes he must know are the
sheerest cant; invitescapital by dwelling upon the advantages of the place;
and at the same time goes around the
aty 'with a patch on his frock behind,'
looking for a better day-the dawn of
that prosperity which he has done
more to bring about than any other
man in the community for his recom-
perws.
"But what are the results? That
which.he has brought about is often
his curse.Hishonest criticisms of offi&Is, his advocacy of measures, his
refusal to be led and used,his failure
to second the schemesof some designing Jack Sharp, whi& in Iarger aties,
might give him a measure of success,
have aeated antagonisms that, at the
first opportunity, will eventuate in
the establishment of a rival newspaper which as a rule succeeds to that
which the other has built up."
The orator chosen for the meeting
was Florida's state treasurer, the Honorable E.E. CoLlins, a former newspaper man. Collins continued in this
same vein, picturing the journalist as
one of the world's forgotten men He
said:
'Sometimes a man can brave the
journalistic wrath of a nation for a
Little while, but soon he will have calamity for his brother and oblivion for
his portion He may well take pride in
the present, for to the patient, plodding, fearless editor is due much of
our national greatness.
"Civilization follows the newspaper to the frontier, when the poor
fellow, whose desk is a dry goods box,
hasmade it possible for law and order
I
-
The
Press Associationn
song
-lyrics by John C. Jeffcott
Song performed on Mar. 28,
1900, at closing ceremonies of
the 21st annual FPA session.
Fort Myers, Rorida'
7 3 We bid p u we-,
one and all,
The Ress Associabbn;
Ow hopes are great our means are small,
We live on ercpectation
We're very grateful for yrxrr caQ!
YwPressAssodabbn
Yw're glad to see us too, I guess,
The Aess Ass0ciatit.m;
We know there's nothing like the press
To cause a nice sensation.
And may our shadow ne'er grow less,
Y w h s s Association.
We7 press yar, but we will not squeeze
The Ress Association;
Welgiveyw liuithoff ourtrees
That beats the whole creation.
From frees that n e w felt a freeze,
YouAessAssociabbn
Andwhenywpressthegddenfnri:
Y w Ress Associabbn;
Then press your lips and press your suit
To -ten
ead, relation,
And give an extra squeeze to boot,
Y w Ress Association.
And when again yw homeward press,
Yau Aass AsSOciabbn,
We wish you all a great success
Wth every publication;
And m y all goodness ewr bless
The Ress Assodation.
Reprinted from The
Mar. 29, 1900
Myers Press,
and order to exist"
The orator pictured the editor as
one who nwer stopped to ask if journalism paid when he entered the business. Concerning this editor, he said:
'Watch the columns of a county
newspaper, will you, especially the
local column, and you may note a
song of genuine h n k f u h e s s r i p
pling along through it like the music
of a brooklet amid the rocks and
mugh places of a barren pasture.
'What ecstasy over a pound of
butter or a couple of links of sausage
and how the editois grateful s o d
thrills at a picked peck of snap beam
and early tomatoes!
"Hispoeticnatureisarousedwhen
a nosegay of roses or pansies adorns
some abandoned paste pot upon his
windowsill, while a new straw hat
from the big store up the street nearly
brings on a case of spasms. Sweet
potatoes from some admireis farm
are fatness to his appetite, and a string
of perch will call forth a notice worth
two dollars and thirty cents-regular
rates-while a Mpaundl watermelon
is a foretaste for heaven, sxand to a
section of wedding cake.
thing that comes and
never hesitata to say so.
He lau& and shouts over the lemonade an; ic-eam,
or the Ionesome
oyster of thechurchfestival;but if you
want to reach such depths of gratitude as plummet line never elsewhere
sounded, or would you gaze upon
mountain tops of praise too lofty for
the flight of the eagle or the eye of
faith, just wait until CoL Lexso sen&
around to the sanctum a fat, chunky
bottle with cobwebs covering the unbroken seal. Compatriots, that is bliss
and the limit of human gratitude can
be strained no further!"
The oratofs lofty remarks, a convention poem, the president's address qnd a history of printing by T.T.
Stockton of Thc Florida Times-Union
constituted the "literary activities" of
the convention, without which no
editor's meeting prior to the hrrn of
the century in Florida was complete.
New members accepted at this
meeting numbered 39, a record number, although some of these so-called
"new members" were really old
members who had decided to rejoin
the old gang. They were:
T.J. Appleyard, Sanfird Chronicle
T.A. Menin, Plant Cify G u r i c t
A D . Roberb, Bnwksvillc Star
S.B. Russ, O d a Nno Capitol
H.J. Drane, l a k c h d Crarkct
WN. Shine and C B . Collins, Tallahassee Floridirm
H.J. Braugher, G r o w City SubTtapic
J.W. White, JncksonmlIr J o u d of
Comnvtcc
John and W.J.
Frank, Jacksondle
Tourist
Mrs. M.C. Hubbard, Macclrnny
Sentinel
KW. Bennett, Lnoy News.
P.V. Leavengood and L.L. Ranny,
O d a Free Press
EE Haskell, Palatka Times-Herald
A Hafuer, Tarpon Springs Tmth
J.I. .Robertson, Brookmille News-
Register
J .Ira Gore, Arcadin Commercial
F.A. Bailey, San Mateo I t m .
F A . Tillman, Sumtrroille Timu
KL Dodd, Lzk City Rrporfer
H.B. Taylor, lPkc City Toboca, Plunt
George M Truax, Tarpan Springs
Tmth
RJ. Morgan, Clearwater Harbor
Timcs
TS. Hamilton, Tampa Tribune
V.B. Hamilton, Wildwood Vidette
J.T. Hearn, Tampa Times
Frank H. Hafner, G m City SubTropic
Guy I. Metcalf, Juno Sun
k E Seldon, Bartow Progress
James T . Ball, I(ty West Adwrtiser
W.R Pitts, DeLand Rccord
D.F. Lyons, San Antonio Hrmld
CH. Newell, DcFuniak Breeze
Lamont Bailey, Tampa Rmita de
FIoride
EW.Peabody, Jacksonville TimesUnion
T.J. Cochran, Inoerness ~hosphate
Field
A. G. Kingsbury, DcLand Imgator
A corrected list of approximately
85 members, wives, daughters and
newspaper staff members who had
agreed to take the association's excursion to Chicago to attend the
Columbian Exposition was read. A
committee of five members was a p
pointed, even at so late a date, to irnplore members of the legislature to
appropriate a special fund for a
Florida exhibit at the exposition
An officialvote was taken among
those persons making the Chicago
hip and d agreed to a stopover at
Mammoth Cave for six hours.
Concerning this Chicago trip,
President Pendleton dosed his annual address by saying in behalf of the
railroads, "Those who do appreciate
us should be remembered, and those
great railroad lines that will carry us
to Chicago should be mentioned in
the terms that they deserve in our
letters home. Such notices are better
than paid advertisements and this
much is due them at our hand."
At the final business session C B .
Pendleton was r e d e e d president;
C.L. Bittinger, Ocala Banner, was
named vice-president; and T.J.
Appleyard, a newcomer, as secretary.
Earlier in the meeting the assodation
had voted to merge the jobs of secretary and treasurer. With the election
of Mr. Appleyard to the new position,
the l e y e a r stewardship of D.W.
Elliott, Sanfbrd Herald, came to an end
S
i
n
c
e Mr. Elliott was honored at
the convention by being asked to sit
onthe platformwith the dignitaries, it
might be assumed that he resigned his
job in favor of another Sanfordite, T.J.
Appleyard of llte Sanfird Chmnide.
During most of hisyears as the FPA
secretary, Colonel Elliott was publisher of Tlsc Florida Dispatch, JacksonviUe.
Colonel David Hubbard Elliott,
secretary of the association almost
from its inception, was born July 11,
1840, at Hillsborough, Lawrence
County, Alabama. The family moved
to a plantation adjoining Tuscambia
in 1847, where Mr. Elliott remained
until 1857.
He moved from the plantation to
Gulf Hammock in Levy County,
Florida, that year and then later to the
S u w m e e River country in Lafayette
County.
In 1860, Colonel Elliott went to
Texas, then to north Alabama, where
he enlisted in the Alabama state service, but was mustered into the Confederate Army at Mobile, Alabama, in
1861. His regiment, the Second Alabama, was garrisoned at Fort Gates in
Mobile Bay. He laterwas stationed on
Florida Living/ February 1993
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Three cheers and a tiger were ten- Times-Union as follows:
dered to Captain Douglass for the de"The action of the ladiescommittee
lightful excursion on the electric road.
in having their reception and afterIt was amusing to see the boys landing
noon tea in Fort Marion, has resulted
in securing the permanent floating of
at Port Tampa, each ladened with a
'Old Glory' from the ramparts of the
big bunch of cigarettes. Of course, the
ancient fort. Captain Eddie Allen of
editors do not smoke the abominable
the sloop yacht Baldwin has presented
things-they were just bringing them
a fine, 40-foot-long flagpole, which
over for some admiring friends."
The Timcr-Union's S t Augustine buNo record can be found of a meetreau will erect and equip ready for a
ing of the assodation in 1895. Lists of
United States flag. to be furnished by
officers elected through the years that
Quartermaster Woodward of the
have been preserved by the dThird Artillery, and which the ladies
tion carry the simple notation, "No
willhoist to the breeze at the opening
election held; the members visited S t
of their reception of the editors and
Augustine." The fact that the 18%
party at 3 o'clock Wednesday aftermeeting in S t Augustine opened with
noon The ceremonies will be enlivT.T. Stockton as acting president and
ened by patriotic airs by the Third's
that Mr. Pendleton ww addressing
superb band."
the members of the National Editorial
Tuesday's edition of The Florida
Assodation, also meeting in St. Augustine at the same time as the meetTi-Union
devoted more than two
ing of the Florida Ress association, pages to the NEA Floridavisit,saying,
"The delegates to the convention are
indicates that no election was held in
from every state in the Union and
1895 and that the assodation used
territory that wants to get into it. They
1895 primarily to plan the biggest
are probably the most powerful body
event in its history, thenational meetof men on the western hemisphere.
ing of the NEA in Florida.
The pen is mightier than the sword,
hence the national editors are an aggregation and condensation of
power."
With more than 70 papers scheduled for presentation at St. Augustine,
NEA President A.O. Bunnell issued
an injunction against long speches
A 10-day excursion into Florida in
and limited each speaker to five min18%by some 700 members and wives
utes, which he interpreted to mean
of the National Editorial Association
a paper of between 1,200 and 1,400
was carried out in cooperation with
words.
the Florida Ress ~ssodation,whose
Floridians on the program and
members met jointly with the NEA in
their spech topics were: "blanageS t ~ u ~ u s t i n e J- i n& ~ .
The editors arrived in Tampa on ment of a Leading Daily in Florida,"
T.T. Stockton of Thc Times-Union;
Sunday, Jan 19,1896, on their way to
"Commercial Journalism in Florida,"
S t Augustine for their first official
J.W.
Whiteof ThcJacksonoilleJoumaf of
b u s i n k sessions. In Tampa they visCommcrtr;"Clerical Florida Editors,"
ited the cigar factories and were
Rev. John M Caldwell, Jaspn Nms;
guests aboard the steamship Olitrcfte
andMAgriculhualEditors inFlorida,"
for a trip down Tampa Bay to the Gulf
by EO. Painter, DcLandAgricultu&.
of Mexico.
The separate meetings of the
The Florida Press Association, 60
Florida Press Association ab the San
strong, arrived in S t Augustine on
~ a r c o~s o t ewere
l sparsely attended.
Monday for its own business meeting
Only 14 editors were present for a
at the San Marcos Hotel, an estab
morning session on Monday, Jan 20,
lishment said to have the largest piand 12 showed up for the evening
azza area in the world. The national
meeting at 7:30p.m. at which time the
editors were expected to leave Tampa
followingofficers were elected: PresiMonday night and arrive in St. Audent, T.T. Stockton, Florida Timesgustine on the Plant system in a p
Union, Jacksonville; Vice-president,
proximately 11Pullmancars. A recep
J.W. White, Jac&sonvilleJournal
tion planned by the ladies for the
ofCommerce; Secretary,T.J. Appleyard of Thc
visiting editors was desaibed in The
National Editorial
Association Excursion
Florida Living / February 1993
Gate City Qlroniclc, reelected; and
Treasurer, B.E. Prevatt, DeLand
Rewrd.
The only other- business undertaken by the Florida editors was to
consider some changes in the
organization's constitution and bylaws. A new section that would have
extended honorary membership to
railway passenger agents was d e
feated but a new section of the same
article was passed that allowed for
honorary memberships to be legal for
all ex-editors and "persons extending
courtesies to the association"
Under a headline, 'Noblemen of
the Nation," The Tirms-Uniunbureau
reporter in St. Augustine told about
the editors' arrival in the Ancient
city
'The editors of the nation, seven
hundred strong, with their wives and
sweethearts, arrived in this city at 2
o'clock this afternoon, a little late 'tis
true, but the people of the old town
were none the less cordial in their
welcome. The town was in gala attire,
flagswere flying everywhere,and everything presented a holiday appearance, even to the people, who were in
their Sunday'dresses.
'Business was almost entirely suspended to see that the keys of the city
were presented to the visitors, and
that they should have a kind remembrance of the hospitality that can be
afforded by the Ancient City.
c
he editors were driven to
the various hotels, where
they were assigned rooms
for their stay here. After dinner, they
xattered through all of the quaint old
streets, and meandered eastward,
westward, southward and northward, taking in the sea wall, the old
fort, the Ponce de Leon,barracks and
other points of interest They were
pleased beyond measure with what
they saw, and agreed that an ideal
spot has been chosen for the convention
'Many remarked that of all the cities in theunited States, old S t Augustine was the prettiest, and that of all
the people in the United States, those
of St. Augustine were the most hospitable.
"No effort was made to begin the
business proceedings, as there was
not sufficient time, and it would have
been difficult to have secured a quo-
.
rum, so aruious was everybody to see
the city that bears the name of being
the oldest in the United States."
It was alsoreported that a Tallahassee resident presented the S t Augustineladies with threecasesof "Florida
grown and made pineapple champagne" for their reception at Fort
Marion. The same newspaper reporter told about theorganization of a
' c a t t l m club" by members of the
NEA western division on the trip to
Florida. He said:
"The cattle-car club is composed of
thewestern contingentfrom the lands
where the buffalo once ranged. One
of the jolly members of the cattlecar dub is W.E Bolton, editor of 2%e
five Stock Inspector, of Woodward,
Oklahoma. Mr. Bolton is in Florida
for the purpose of inducing immigration to the candidate for adrnission to the Unioh 'With a little more
immigration,' says he, 'we will have
people enough to entitle us to
statehood'
'He offers beautiful squaws with
heritages of entailed lands and the
'loveliest of divorcelaws.Our divorce
laws,' says Mr. Bolton, 'are the finest
onearth.ChicagoisnotinitataLItis
really a fact that in Oklahoma you can
drop a five dollar bill in the slot and
securea divorce while you wait; while
a ten dollar note will secure one absolute. Oklahoma is the most beautiful
spot under the sun We came away
from there just to demonstrate how
much better we like it as compared to
other spots when we go back.'"
The FIorida writers seemed to
take delight in telling their readers
little anecdotesabout their colleagues
from the rest of thenation An Oregon
editor was said to have had an 'adfair
of the heart' in T h o m a d e on the
trip to S t Augustine. The writer said,
'If he should chance to rehnn +hat
way, he may find razors waiting
for him"
Western editors were desaibed as
"great, big strappingsix-footenam
The
writerwent on to say,'In that country
they evidently act as their own bouncers, and to secure a position on a
newspaper in the far west, one must
not only have brains but muscle
enough to whip every nine men out of
ten that he should chance to meet."
The Texas editors were described
as little fellows, but the writer said
they carry a gun in one boot-leg and a
bowie in the other. Kentucky editors
were said to be delighted with the
d d Florida weather, which they ded as 'mint julep weather," and
then went in seaxh of the "nearest
manufactory of mint juleps."
At the firstjoint business session of
the National Editorial Association
and the Florida Press Association on
Wednesday, Jan.22, the visitors were
welcomed by Mayor Henry GaiUard,
who spoke for official S t Petersburg,
the Rev. J.N. MacGonigle, who spoke
for the atizens and CB. Pendleton,
immediate past president of the FPA.
@
n his address, Mr. Pendleton touched on conditions in C U ~t~ was later
reported that 'his first mention of
Cuba excited the assemblage to
cheers, and each recurring appeal
brought appropriate applause, showing that the NEA and Florida Ress
Assodation are a unit for Cuba's recognition"
Ur.Pendleton closed his remarks
with another reference to Cuba, as
follows:
"Now, brothers of the press, after
leaving St. Augustine, I would like to
welcome you to the city of Key West,
possibly the only tropical city in
America, a city of which it has been
said by one who loves her, 'that it lies
where the waters of the Atlantic and
the Gulf first meet and kiss each
other.'
"If you come there, we will give
you a hearty welcome. If you could go
further,say, for instance, to Cuba, we
would give you encouragement, but
today the Cubans are fighting for that
which we obtained in the great war of
the revolution It is possibly on account of this war we have no representative today h m Cuba, but let us
treat that before another annualmeeting, that the representatives of the
press of free Cuba may be with us."
Resident A.O. Bunnell, addressing the Eleventh Annual Convention
of the NEA in St. Augustine, saw far
ahead of his time into the modern
newspaper composing room, when
he said: ". ..And gigantic steps ahead
are being tdcen every year. The days
of the Linotype, now being established in power, may already be numbered by the Monptype which casts
and sets single types and justifies automatically, and this may be thrown
aside for a photographic newspaper
production, which will do away with
types and presses."
BunnellcaIleduponhisassociation
to do something about journalism
education, saying the organization
had been dragging its feet for a decade:
"At the first regular convention of
this assodation, held in Cincinnati
1886, Resident Herbert, the originator of the assxiation, forcefully advocatedthat among the first works of the
association should be the taking of
stepsfor the establishment of acollege
of journalism and the encouraging of
journalistic haining in a few of the
existing universities.
'Every succeeding president from
that time on has 'taken steps,' but for
lack of practical propelling force on
the part of the assodation, these steps
have beensimply up and downmovemenb without any advance. It seers
to me that after ten years of 'marking
time,' at this commencement of our
second decade the sharp command
should be given to 'forward march'
"It has been suggested in this connection that it would be a useful and
pleasant thing to have a course of
reading prepared, covering, say, four
years to embrace such topics as the
English language and literature, p
litical economy, American history,
American constitutional state and
muniapal governments, aty and domestic sanitation, ornamentation and
improvement of streets, grounds and
parks, newspaper publishing in all
its branches, including the biographies of leading editors of the United
States, and to provide for some system for examination in this course of
reading from year to year, and at its
conclusion to give a certificate to the
several candidates ak having completed the course of journalistic
reading adopted by the National
Editorial Association; the course
to include topics that are constantly to
be diswsed by editors of the papers
in our smaller cities, as well as the
study of papers and treatises directly
bearing upon the business rnanagement, advertising, circulation, editFlorida Living / February 1993
.
in& locallin& etc., that belong to everyday newspaper work
"It is for me to supply on this occasionnot the argument, but the suggesdon, for your prompt and serious consideration'
Thus, Resident Bunnell not only
called for action to be taken on colleges of journalism, but he spelled out
a course of study not a great deal
different from that used in modem
journalism schools.
Bunnell was ahead of his time with
respect to recognition of women in
journalism He told the editors, "As I
stand here today surrounded by fellow officers, it seems passing strange
to me that not one of them is a woman.
Fellow members, let the future see no
roll call of officers of the convention
that does not include at least one
wontan.Woman is eminently capable
of filling a position the highest gift of
this asxiation"
A leading female editor at the convention was Anna M. Hughes
Marcotte, publisher and editor of The
St. Augustine Taller. Mrs. Marcotte
was bomin Williamsport, Pennsylvania, in 1843 and was 52 at the time of
the NEA Florida Convention. She
married Lt. Amos 8. Rhodes of the
Seventh Pennsylvania Cavalry, and
accompanied his regiment at the
battle of Antietam, and at the siege of
Nashville.
he received a special
permit from General
Morgan, C.S.A., after
the battle of ~ h e l b y d l e to
, go on the
field to rescue the dead body of her
husband. Afterwards, she karried
Capt. Henry Marcotte, U.S.A., and
served with him in the Dakota Temtory prior to 1873, frequently having
to defend herself against attacks by
Sioux Indians at Forts Rice and Lincoln, and in those troubled and dangerous times she proved that she
could handle a rifle with as much skill
and courage as any soldier.
Mrs. Marcotte was the f i t white
woman who ever aossed the plains
from Fort Lincoln to where the city of
Fargo now stands. Captain Marcotte
was ordered to make a trail for the
Northern Pacific Railway engineer in
January 1873, and this remarkable
journey of 233 miles was accomplished in sleighs, camping in whatever spot fortune might provide.
To give some idea of the hardships
encountered on that journey, especially by woman, it is only necessary
to state that the mercury during the
entire trip, ranged from 28 degrees to
48 degrees below zero.
In 1891, Mrs.Marcotte became ediSt. Augustine Nctvs, asociety
tor of 771~
journal, but only remained one season
with that publication In 1892, a p
peared the first number of 77u Taller,
which immediately became popular.
Those writing about Mrs. Marcotte
during the NEA Conventionsaid that
her publication "increased in popular
esteem each year, and with her individuality stamped on every page."
Mrs.Marcotte was said to be 'an
indomitableworker, fatigue seems to
be unknown to her, and when not
engaged in her own business affairs,
she is constantly on the alert, doing
good here and there with willing
heart and strong hand. The chief traits
of this remarkable woman may be
summed up as force of character,
strong will, sound common sense,
quickness of perception and withal a
kindliness of manner and disposition,
in all of which she had few equals and
no superior among her sex."
Despite President Bunnell's recommendations in his annual address,
the committee on the president's
speech, when it reported to the convention, recommended specific action on only one topic.
The committee recommended that
the associationsecretary move immediately to prepare acompilation of the
newspaper laws of the several states
to be ready at the next conventioh
Concerninga course in journalism,
the committee simply recommended
that NEA commend the "pioneers
among the collegiate institutions that
have already adopted a special course
of study and endowed a chair for instruction in journalism and urge such
colleges and universities as have not
taken this step to take the matter up
for serious consideration.'in view of
the importance attached."
The president's wish for the association to begin -action on the establishment of a permanent headquarters for NEA was left to the "best
thoughts of the incoming president."
As for the election of a woman to an
office in the association, it was recommended that a special committee be
appointed to look into the matter. 0
'Banquet to fie
Florida Press Association"
Mar. 28, 1900
Oystsrcock~l.
Tor this relief much W - t l a m l e t
Radishes, Olives.
Cream of Celeri[sic],
Consommelmperiele
'Slaw but sun, like summefs advent'-Jenkins
Rletof Caloosehatchce
R l w Trout,
a la MontreuiN,
PotatoesParisknne.
T m the ~ d xa'
e s ennged and foamy mouth.'
-Twelfth Mght
St Julienne.
7hm methought 1 heard r mellow md'
-TeNlyson.
Bolled Leg of
SouthdownMutton,
Caper Sauce.
New Green Peas.
'Unlike the editor. green and he&'-Anon.
Breastof Chlcken
On Crustade. a la Relne.
And count their chicfens e n they're hatched'
-Butler.
CardlndPunch.
'Since punch and iile so we1 agrce..'4ackl&
Roast Wild Turkey,
SweetPohto Dressing.
CranbenySauce.
'But man m ' d man on h d q s pay.'-(;r/.
Stuff& Tomatoes,
potato Croquettes.
4sparagus,~~auc~~ollandaise.
Bean vegetables in a gumbling way.'-Byron.
VautSauteme.
'Sparflingbubbles d pure delight0-Jenkins.
SaladeRusse.
Few things are impossible to diligencr and skill.'
Yxvnpagne
Kings it makes gods. and mtana ontunr kings.'
4ssorted Cake.
Edam Cheese,Amerlcen Cheese,
Water Waters,Nub,
LayerRaisins.
The last taste of week is sweeter 1asl'-Richard 11.
'Reprintedfrom The Fort Myers Press.
dar. 29,1900
Rorida Living / February 1993
the h m d
Part seven in a series on the history of the Florida Press Association
By JOHN PAUL JONES
Continued from February 1993
he second day of the joint
NEA-Florida Press Association convention was
filed with major addresses on matters relating to the press. An address
on advertising was directed more toward the need for merchants-advertisers-"to keep faith with their customers."
The merchant "must do as his advertisements promise; he must not
make claims which he cannot fulfill;
he must not expect advertising to propel trade against a tide of dishonest
dealing." The speaker indicated that it
was necessary for the newspaper to
educateadvertisersin the pathof honesty in advertising.
A major paper on "libel laws" was
well received, according to reports of
the convention. Libel had become of
major importance to newspapers
38
throughout the United States as persons who felt they had beeninjured by
the press began to use the courts
rather than the horsewhip or their
fists to settle grievances with editors.
i7z Times- Union, in reporting this particular speech, commented:
"Among the most attentive listeners to the papers relating to the libel
laws was H.H.McCreary of The
Gainesville (Flu.) Daily Sun. Mr.
McCreary probably enjoys a distinction as defendant in libel suits that no '
other member of the association can
boast of, having been sued for criminal libel by a baseball umpire for criticizing his decisions during the game
between two local clubs."
One of the final acts of the convention before adjournment for an excursion around Florida was a motion to
table a resolution that called on the
President of the United States to recognize the "belligerent rights of
Cuba." The motion to table this resolution came only af ter severalhours of
heated debate and "deafening
cheers" when Cuba was mentioned.
The sentiments of the convention
were strongly in favor of the Cubans
but the matter was laid on the table
because cooler heads prevailed with
pleas to leave such matters up to each
individual newspaper and editor.
Before adjournment, the NEA editors named H.H.Thomas, editor of
TIw Farmers' Friend of Mechanicsburg.
Pennsylvania, as their president, selected Calveston, Texas as the convention city for 1897and named W.E.
Pabor of Tlle Pabor Lake Pineapple,
Pabor M e , Florida, as the poet laureate of the group, for life. Mr. Pabor
already had been elected poet laureate for the Florida Press Association.
Originally, the national editors
Bay
had planned tovisit theMBiscayne
counhy" of Florida before returning
home but The Florida Times-Union reported on Jan. 24 that this would not
be possible since the railroad had not
been built south of Lake Worth. Their
Florida Living / March 1993
- tour df
Florida began in Daytona
Beach on Saturday, Jan. 25, where the
trainstopped long enough for a quick
tour of the city. About 100citizens, the
mayor and members of the city council met the train. With themweremore
than 60 "conveyances" of private citizens.
Those who could find seats were
driven down Ridgewood Avenue, up
the river front, across the upper
bridge, "through the city beautiful,"
to the beach, down the beach to the
lower bridge and back to the station.
The drive was described as the most
beautiful in the "Fountain City," a
name frequently used for Daytona
Beach, along with the words, "the
City Beautiful."
After sightseeing as far south as
Palm Beach, the editors returned to
Jacksonville on Jan. 29, arriving at
11:30 a.m. The trip back up the state
began in Palm Beach at 9 p.m. and
took about 14 hours because of "hot
boxes all along the road." The special
train consisted of 12 coaches and one
baggage car.
In Jacksonville, the "Tripod Men,"
as the editors were called in the local
newspapers, went aboard the Vigilant
on Jan. 30 for a trip on the St. Johns
River. For their entertainment, orchestras from both the Windsor and
the St. James hotels provided music.
ThE Times-Union described the trip on
the river as follows:
"On the t i p down the river several
boxes of magnificent Florida oranges
were opened and the golden fruit was
passed around among the guests. All
were delighted and surprised that
such oranges could be had in Florida
since the freeze. After the oranges
came a light lunch, consisting of sandwiches, strawberry ice cream, claret
punch, coffee and cigars for all who
cared to smoke."
As the editors concluded their
Florida meeting they were generous
in their praise of the state. Concerning
St. Augustine, one editor called it "the
city of pretty women, fine hotels,
grand churches and fair prices." Another said it was the "Italy of
America." A third said, "It is like going to a foreign country to come here
in January. Am delighted with the
quaint old buildings, the narrow
streets, and with the climate." Another said the climate was worth a
million dollars.
Florida Living / March 1993
Not all were complimentary, however. An Oklahomanfailed to be completely captivated. He said, "This
town is old enough to have whiskers.
If the streets were kept clean, with
feweroystershellsspread around, the
city would be more pleasant."
Another editor said the city was
being slowly destroyed by "ruinous
improvements." A third said that St.
Augustine was "almost as full of rare
things as 271e Times-Union."
On to Nassau
The 1897meeting of FPA consisted
of a one-day business meeting in
Green Cove Springs on Jan 20, attended by about 30 members, and an
excursion to Nassau in the Bahamas.
The afternoon session, which began at noon in the courthouse of the
"Parlor City," featured the president's address and electionof officers
for 1897-1898. In his address, President T.T. Stockton three times
pleaded with the editors to set their
advertising rates and then stand by
them. He urged the members not to
accept payment for their advertising
space "in trade." This emphasis on
advertising rate cutting was a clear
indication that the timespent revising
the association constitution and bylaws in 1890to make it impossible for
members to cut rates had been a waste
of time.
The new officers, in addition to
President T.T. Stockton, were: F.L.
Robertson, Hernnndo News, Brooksville, vice-president; T.J. Appleyard,
Gate City Cilronicle, Sanford, secretary
and E.O. Painter, Agriculturisf, DeLand, treasurer.
Thomas Telfair Stockton, who began his second term as Florida Press
Association president at the Green
Cove Springs meeting, was born in
Quincy, Florida, Oct. 8,1853, and died
in Jacksonville Nov. 30,1907. His father was Col. William Tennent Stockton and his mother was Julia Telfair
Stockton, both of whom were later
with him in the newspaper business
in Jacksonville.
T.T. Stockton's early education
took place in the private schools of
Quincy and the Quincy Academy.
After the death of his father, he as-
sisted his mother in running the farnily plantationuntil he was 15and then
he began a career as a civil engineer. A
year later, his family moved to Jacksonville and he became associated
with the SouthernExpress Company,
where he remained in employment
for 12 years. At the time he left the
express company in 1883, he was
route agent for the state of Florida.
Between 1883 and 1886 he was in
the mercantile business in Jacksonville as a successfulmerchant. In 1886,
he and his brothers, and some other
Jacksonville businessmen, bought
The Jacksvvil!c MorningNews and The
Jacksonville Herald and combined the
two papers under the name The NewsHerald. Later this same group incorporated as the Florida Publishing
Company, which published Tile
Florida Times-Union in 1888.
T.T. Stockton was treasurer and
business manager. Concerning his
management of 771eTimes-Union, one
biographer wrote: "Under his management the paper became one of the
leading journals of not only the state
but of the South. He was familiarly
known as 'T.T.' and was a journalist
who took a foremost part in raising
the standards of the profession by
devotion to his calling."
Mr. Stocktonwas prominent in the
social, civic and economic life of
Duval County and the city of Jacksonville up until his death. He belonged
to theSeminoleClub, wasactivein the
old JacksonvilleBoard of Trade, was
at one time commander of Stonewdl
JacksonCampNo. 83, a member of the
United Sons of Confederate Veterans,
and an Elk. In his profession, he was
active in the affairs of the Southern
Publisher's Association.
On May 16,1877,he married Willie
Ann Lawton, daughter of Col.
Winborn J. Lawton and Sarah Lewis
Lawton, both of Georgia. The couple
had five children: Telfair Jr., Winborn
Lawton, Julia Telfair (Mrs. David K.
Catherwood), Mildred Lawton (Mrs.
Horace M. Fox), and Helen Clark.
Mr. Stockton was a strong advocate of responsible journalism. In his
annual address at Green Cove
Springs he said:
"A great field of usefulness is
opening up for the newspapers of
Florida. Shall we embrace the opportunity to demonstrate the power of
the press, or shall we sit down su-
pinely or more properly speaking, lie
down and die an inglorious death?
"I, for one, say 'No. Awake.' Assert
the power which your position gives
you, and let each and every one of us
remember that if we are right for the
discharge of our work, it is reasonable
to expect support, cooperation, and
sympathy from fellow members of
the organization to whi& yebelong.
I have obemectpa'pers springing up
-d-ov'? Florida for the past decade
with verdant growth, which, at first,
promised to harden and grow into
strong journalistic trees, but time has
clearly demonstrated that only a
small proportion of such ventures become a fixed success.
"I have before me a list of the state
papers, numbering in round figures
125.Knowing somethingof the localities in which they are published, I am
impressed with the idea that they are,
in the main, of a healthy and thrifty
growth, just such publications as
should lend their best aid to the upbuilding of the Florida Press Association, which means 30 much to its
members and the great state in which
we live."
Two things happened at this 1897
meeting that revealed the concern of
the Florida Press Association members with the approachingwar clouds
over Cuba. Prior to the meeting, a
number of newspapers had editorialized about the long, naked coastlines
that circled Florida, a coastline without adequate defenses against Spanish naval guns.
While the FPA was meeting at
Green Cove Springs, the members of
the Coast and Harbor Defense were
meeting in Tampa. One of the actions
of the Florida Press Association was
passage of a resolution expressing
"the hearty sympathy and co-operation of this association with the objects of that convention." What the
coast defense members were doing in
Tampa was making long speeches
about the need for adequate defense
of the state's coasts. The editors
agreed heartily with those objectives.
The second thing that happened
was at the "literary" session of the
association on the first night of the
convention. At that time members
heard poet laureate W.E. Pabor read a
poem called "Cuba Libre." This poem
rang out for 27 stanzas that called for
Cuba's freedom.The first two stanzas
were as follows:
From where eternal summer smiles
And rose perfimejlls all the breeze,
The Queen Isle of the tropic isles,
Appealsfor help across tk seas.
From out a blood encrimsoned woe,
From out an agony of pain,
Those Cuban criesforfreedomfrowFreedom from vassalage to Spain.
Twenty-seven members of the association left Jacksonville on the
morning of Jan. 21 on one of the elegant coaches of the Florida East
Coast Line, for Miami where they
were scheduled to board the steamer
Monticello for their voyage to Nassau.
Accompanying the party were thefollowing out-of-state journalists:
Charles E. Howard, editor of Farm,
Field and Fireside, Chicago; Joseph N.
Rodgers, managing editor of The
Philadelphia Inquirer; Miss Lottie
Miller of The Cincinnati Enquirer; and
Julian Hams of The Atlanta Constitution. The Times-Union said concerning
this junket:
"The trip down was highly enjoyed by the entire party, but especially by the ladies.It was the first visit
to the east coast of most of the party
and was a revelation to them. Only a
glimpse of the beauties of St. Augustine could be obtained, as we passed
through the Ancient City, but enough
was seen to assure our visitors that it
was no myth.
"At Ormond Beach and Daytona
we caught a glimpse of the Halifax, at
New Smyrna the Hillsboroughand 15
milesnorth of Titusville we came suddenly upon the broad expanse of the
famed Indian River, and followed its
banks for many miles. At Rockledge,
our visitors saw their first orange
grove laden with fruit. The palmetto
tree was a mystery to them and when
we reached Palm Beach and looked
upon the coconut tree, illuminated by
the electric lights of the Royal Poinciana, their delight knew no bounds.
"At West Jupiter,JohnnyJumper,a
genuine Seminole Indian, dressed in
true Indian style, boarded the train
and rode with us to West palm ~ e a c h .
He is a fine specimen and attracted a
great deal of attention. He was introduced to the ladies of the party, who
tried to talk to him, but as a conversationalist Johnny is not a success, however, he answered as many of their
questions as he could and seemed to
enjoy the admiration his bright costume elicited."
In 1898, George W. Wilson was
president and editor-in-chief of the
Florida Publishing Company, publishers of The Florida Times-Union and
Citizen. T.T. Stockton, president of the
Florida Press Association, was business manager of the same newspaper.
Wilson was one of the new members
elected at the 1898convention of FPA
in DeLand on Mar. 22-23.
As this study has already shown,
the leadership of the Florida Publishing Company asserted its influence
over the new press association from
the beginning. It continued this influence in 1898.Just prior to the opening
of the DeLand convention The TimesUnion and Citizen ran an editorial on
Mar.21,1898, offering advice on how
the convention should be run,saying:
"Florida editors and publishers
will meet inDeLand tomorrow, and it
is hoped will adhere strictly to the
business programme marked out.
The good that might be done by the
association cannot be exaggerated
and the good that has been done cannot be overestimated. The press is a
powerful factor in the life of our
American state. Working together for
the people of our state, it can become
almost omnipotent in Florida.
"We are glad that Florida joumalists this year will not give their time to
junketing and feasting, for questions
of high import to the profession and
the people will demand their attention.
"Discipline those members who
sell their space for a song or to gain
advantage over a rival. This appeared
to be a splendid maneuver at the time
but dangerous and fatal in the end.
"Along these general lines suggested the association must travel
closely and firmly, if it would prosper
and do good work. A man's political
principles are of no more interest to
the association than his religious belief but the business reputation and
moral standing of its members are of
vital importance."
Florida Living / March 1993
n e 1911 co~nposingroom a t The Florida Times-Unionin ]acksonville zulterepagcs were set up in 'yafs" (page-size metalframes).
On Sunday, Mar. 6, 1898, Thc
Times-Union and Citizen published an
advanced agenda for the DeLand
meeting. This agenda contained the
following list of addresses to be made
at the convention:
"Fellowship inNewspaper Work,"
to be delivered by B.B.Tatum of The
Courier-Informant, Bartow
"Florida Reviewed-Its Commerce, Agriculture, and Industries,"
by E.O. Painter, Agriculturist,DeLand
"Does It Pay-Job Office with
Newspaper?" by J.E. Trice, Tallahasscan, Tallahassee
"The Necessity of Maintaining
Rates," by Guy I. Metcalf, Tropical
Sun, West Palm Beach
"Competition Among Newspapers," by J.C. Smith, Constitution,
Monticello
"Running a Newspaper Successfully in a Small Town," L.L. Ramsey,
Free Press, Mayo
"Education of Advertisers and
Subscribers," E.W. Peabody, TimesUnion and Citizen, Jacksonville
"Florida as a Newspaper Field,"
Philip Isaacs, Press, Fort Myers
"Journalistic Etiquette," by L.J.
Brurnby, Marion Press, Ocala
"A Country Woman Journalist,"
Florida Living / March 1993
Mrs. Neva C. Child, DcSoto County
Champion, Arcadia
"Newspaper Menand Advertising
Agents-Their Relation to Each
Other," by Ellis B. Wager, Star,
Titusville
"Thirty Years a Weekly Newspaper Man," by F.A. Mann, News, St.
Augustine
"The Society Paper in Modern
Journalism," by Miss E. Nellie Beck,
Tampa
"The Editor as a Traveler," R.J.
Morgan, Sub-Peninsula, St. Petersburg
"The Editor and the Schoolmaster," Tom F. McBeath, School Exponent, Jacksonville
As it turned out, most of these
speakers failed to show up at the
meeting or arrived too late to give
their speeches so the only talks presented were: "The Editor and the
Schoolmaster," "Fellowship in Newspaper Work," "Running a Newspaper Successfully in a Small Town,"
and " Thirty Years a Weekly Newspaper Man."
Association officials were disappointed in the attendance, according
to Thc Times-Union and Cifizen. Only
18 editors and publishers were listed
on the official roster of the convention, as follows:
E.W. Peabody, Times-Union and
Citizen, Jacksonville
T.T. Stockton, Times-Union and
Citizen, Jacksonville
T.J. Appleyard, Gate City Chronicle,
Sanford
W.E. Pabor, Pineapple, Lake Pabor
C.L. Bittinger, Sfar, Ocala
L.L. Ramsey, Free Press, Mayo
Frederick L. Robertson, News-Register, Brooksville
L. J. Brumby, Free Press, Ocala
B.B. Tatum, Courier-Informant,
Bartow
Tom F. McBeath, School Exponent,
Jacksonville
S. Weller Johnson, Agriculturist,
DeLand
B.E. Prevatt, Record, DeLand
E.B. Calhoun, Times-Courier,
Marianna
E.D. Oslin, Times, Melbourne
J. Ira Gore, Times, St. Petersburg
E.G. Mack, News, Wewahitchka
C.O. Codrington, News, DeLand
E.W. Wager, Star, Titusville
At this DeLand meeting members
of the association showed their first
interest in doing something for eduA1
the B m d
7-s-
cation at the university level. On motion of C.L.Bittinger, the convention
agreed to give a first prize of $15 and
a second prize of $10 to the Stetson
University students who wrote the
two best essays on "Counhy Journalism." The awards were to be made at
the "coming commencement."
At the annual election of officers,
Fred L. Robertson, News-Register,
Brooksville, was named the new
president., and J.W. White of Thejournal of Commerce, Jacksonville, was
named vice-president. T.J. Appleyard, Gate City Chronicle, Sanford,was
re-elected treasurer.
A five-member executive committee was named as follows: H.H.
McCreary, Sun, Gainesville; John M.
Caldwell, Nms, Jasper; Frank Harris,
Banner, Ocala; T.T. Stockton, TimesUnion and Citizen, Jacksonville; and
Tom F. McBeath, Scltool Exponent,
Jacksonville.
New members elected at the same
meeting were:
Theo H. Hartig, Bulletin, Lake
Butler
Walter S. Graham, Metropolis,
Miami
J.E. Pound, Democrat, Live Oak
Rev. J.B. Ley, Little Methodist,
Tallahassee
C.B. Kendall, Times-Herald,
Palatka
A. Winthrop Sargent, Idea, Avon
Park
Charles Y. Miller, News, Leroy
J.H.
Humphries, journal,
Bradenton
J.J. Ehren, Breeze, New Smyrna
Daniel Giles, Advocate, Westville
Charles V. Hines, Republican, .
Melbourne
Rev. L. D. Geiger, Cifizen,
Apopka
Rev. J.C. Porter, Baptist Witness,
Ocala
George W. Wilson, Times-Union
and Citizen, Jacksonville
P.A. Vans Agnew, Valley Gazette,
Kissimmee
Thomas A. Davis, Fair Florida,
Umatilla
W.M. Gore, Tintcs, St. Petersburg
Two resolutions passed at this
meeting are worthy of note. The first
asked for the appointment of a special
committee towork toward getting the
state to send a Florida exhibit to the
Omaha Exposition, and the second to
approve the awarding of two prizes
for the best articles written about
DeLand and published in a member's
newspaper within 60 days after the
close of the convention. First prize
was a gold medal and the second five
dollars in cash.
The first resolution was significant
because it indicated an attitude on the
part of the association members that
the newspapers of Florida, in the absenceof adequate financial support of
a chamberof commercetype development of Florida and Florida tourism.
by the state, were willing to use their
resources;tobringsibout stronger support.
The se,cond resc~lutioncontinued aL
practice begun earlier of urging members to repay the hospitalityshown by
convention host towns by writing favorable reports in their own newspapers when they returned home.
This practice was, of course, not
inconsistent with the sentiment
shown in the first resolution, namely,
that the members of the press had a
duty toward the citizens of Florida to
help the state grow <andprosper.
War clouds in the distance might
have caused the small attendance at
the 1898convention but if, indeed, the
Cuban situation was on the minds of
the editors, that state of mind did not
show up at the convention itself. No
resolutions were passed on the matter, no patriotic poems were presented and no discussions of war
were held. The problem of the inadequately defended coastlines never
came up.
The new president of the association, Fred L. Robertson, was born in
South Carolina in 1844. He entered
the Army of the Confederacy in 1861
at age 17 and served until the war's
end. He was seriously wounded
twice, first in 1861 and again in 1864.
At the end of the war, Robertson
went to Mexico, where he lived until
1868.He moved to Florida in 1872.He
remained active in Confederateveterans' affairs throughout his life, however. He was appointed Adjutant
General and Chief of Staff of the
Florida Division, United Confederate
Veterans at the group's inception
Shortly after arriving in Florida,
Robertson established The South
Florida Journal at Sanford.Thiswas the
first newspaper to be published in
OrarLge County. In 1876, he moved to
Fort Reed and established The Crescent. He relocated that newspaper to
Brooksville in the fall of 1876 and it
was the first newspaper published in
Hernando qounty.
Robertsomfounded The Brooksville
News in 1886and 771eBrwksville Register in 1891. These two newspapers
were later consolidated and appeared
as 771e Nms-Register, which he was
publishing at the time of his election
W "-e
111 Florida Press ~rksident.
RI
was an eauly member of
the 2
n, his name appearing
on the roster ol.c *.I& =*=~'utive
committee of the association a:j early as 1882,
and 'like some! of his predecesso:rs, he
in :state
polii
was active
tics. He scw e d
..
.
.
.
as enrolling clerk for the 1881-1883
Florida legislature.As bill secretary of
the Senatein 1895he was commended
for developing a new document control system. He was re-elected as bill
secretary.
Robertson married Margaret
Boswell of Fauquier County, Virginia. A son, Fred Ion Robertson, was
born at the mother's family home,
"Spring Farm," Virginia on Dec. 31,
1872, and later joined his father in the
newspaper business.
~
~
--
A"**
Last Convention
Of the Century
Florida Press Association members held their final convention of the
19th century at St. Petersburg as
guests of J. Ira Gore and 77te St. Petersburg Times. About 40 members gathered in the Opera House on Tuesday,
Mar. 28, for the opening ceremonies,
which included an address of welcome by the mayor and presentation
of an official key to the city to FPA
president, Fred Robertson.
The meeting was lategettingunder
way because FPA members, true to
their profession, watched a firehouse
burn for two hours at the end of the
dock.
The evening's literary session was
Flnrida Livine 1 March 1993
postponed because 20 association
members were detained in Tampa
because of problems with their train
accommodations.
This final meeting of the century
was routine, without any controversies or major debates. Members enjoyed an oyster roast in the city park,
described as "a roast of gastronomic
perfection." An emotional event of
the meeting was the adoption of a
"daughter" for the association. The
"daughter" was the 7-year-old
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C.L.
Bittingerof TheOcala Star.W.E. Pabor,
poet laureate for the association, presented the "daughter" as he read a
poem to her. The event was described
by the press as follows:
"The history attached to this beautiful incident dates back to six years
ago the coming May, in Tallahassee,
where the state papers then met, prior
to their pilgrimage to the world's
Fair, on which occasion W.E. Pabor
met with the association for the first
time and became acquainted with
Bittinger's blue-eyed girl baby, about
whom he composed a little delicious
poem that gave the little one much
publicity."
Mr. Pabor met with the association
againatSt. Petersburg. At that time he
was inspired to indite the lines to the
little girl who through them became
the daughter of the Florida Press Association, the trust being accepted by
President J.W. White, in the name of
the association.
Mr. Pabofs reading of the poem
was prefaced by a few remarks, reciting facts given, in which he spoke of
the fact that his footsteps were descending the slopes of life's journey
while those of the young girl were just
entering the ascending slope with an
apparent long vista before her. His
words touched all hearts, bringing
tears to many eyes.
When the State Press Association
went to Chicago in 1893and was sidetracked to visit Mamrnoth Cave, Kentucky, Miss Bassett, 12 years of age
and the daughter of Editor Bassett of
the then Kissimmee Leader, was
adopted as the daughter of the association, but subsequentlyhavingmarried, a vacancy was created.
At the proposed "literary" session,
J.W. White read a paper on "The Editor and the Public." Press reports described this speech as "full of good
77re 1911 stereotype room ofThe Florida Times-Union in tdtidt metal printing plates
were moldedfront contposed pnges in papier-midti ntat fonn.
things." Mrs. Neva C. Child of The
DeSoto County Chatnpion, Arcadia,
spoke on the topic, "A Country
Woman Journalist." She explained
that she had begun her journalism
career in Colorado where she had
been treated "with marked deference
by the men of that state." She explained that such conduct by the men
of Coloradowas "in strongcontrast to
that she met as a newspaper woman
in DeSoto County."
F.A. Mann, editor of Tlte St. Augustine News, read a paper on the "Relation of the Country Editor to Politics,"
and the Rev. J.C. Porter closed the
session with a speech about the
"Home Weekly as an Educator."
Prior to adjournment, the following officers were elected to take the
association into the 20th century:
J.W. White, president. Mr. White
had long been associated with 77rc
Journal of Commerce ofJacksonville, but
came to the meeting as the new publisher of Thc Fraternal Record, a
monthly magazine he founded and
edited for many years. The new vicepresident was B.B. Tahun of The Couricr-Informant, Bartow. T.J. Appleyard, Sanford Chronicle, wasre-elected
secretary, and E.W. Peabody, jncksonvillc Titnes-Union and Citizcn, was
elected treasurer.
James William White, the new
president, was a Canadian. He was
bornNov. 8,1860, in Woodstock, New
Brunswick, Canada. He waseducated
in the common and normal schoolsof
Maine and moved to Florida in 1881
and made his home in Jacksonville,
livingfor50year.sat the same address,
1241 Market St. His father was the
Rev. JohnT. White, a Baptist minister.
Records show J.W. White began
attending Florida Press Association
meetings in 1893, and in six years rose
in the organization to become president, serving two terms. He was
given the title, "Champion joiner of
fraternal organizations in the United
States" by the American Blue Book for
his membership in 74 different fraternal groups.
As editor of 771cFra ternal Record, he
kept up with what went on in Florida
in the fraternal field because he belonged to most of the groups. This
title, however, fails to do him justice
because he was active in many nonfraternal organizations. He was a
member of The Jacksonville Library
Board, a city councilman, a county
commissioner, a member of the Duval
County Board of Public Instruction,
and one of the first presidents of the
Florida Good Roads Association, in
addition to serving as an active member of the Florida Press Association.
White died in Jacksonvilleat age 84
on Jan.20,1943, and is buried in Evergreen Cemetery there. 0
the O$d~d
Part eight in a series
on the history of the Florida Press Association
Continued from March 1993
By JOHNPAUL JONES
Turn of the Cen tury
A
t the turnof the century, the
Florida Press Association
had three clear goals: a) to
change the libel laws of Florida; b) to
help attract more residents to Florida;
and c) to get newspapers to charge
more for their advertising and maintain whatever rate was set.
As the first decade moved along, a
number of interesting long-range programs developed at the state conventions that pointed toward some new
goals for FPA members. These will be
discussed as they were proposed and
put into action.
At the turn of the century, Florida's
10most populous cities were Jacksonville (31,798), Pensacola (19,547),
Tampa (18,942), Key West (16,823),St.
Augustine (4,272), Lake City (4,013),
Gainesville (3,633), Ocala (3,380),
Palatka (3,301), and Fernandina
(3,245).
The state's population was
566,885. The number of newspapers
and periodicals published in the state
by 1905 was 173, including 19 daily
newspapers, four semi-weekly newspapers, 136 weeklies, two semimonthlies and 12 monthlies. I
n 1905,
31 towns had two or more newspapers, and Miami, with a populationof
only 1,681, had seven newspapers,
three of them dailies.
The association's first meeting of
the new century was held at Fort
Myers, a town with a population of
943, according to the 1900 census.
Editors assembled in Punta Gorda on
Monday night, Mar. 26, and left at 7
a.m. the next day by the Plant steamer,
St. Lucie, for Fort Myers. It was reported that "the wind and tide were
unfavorable, and some of the ladies
were threatened with mal-de-mer,
but fortunately escaped."
The Fort Myers Press discussed
these unfavorable conditions in more
detail, as follows:
"While preparations had been
made to extend a hearty welcome to
the association, the elements were not
in accord with the people of Lee
County, for a terrific sale of rain and
wind broke out Tuesday morning, as
the party embarked on the steamer St.
Lucie, but Captain Fischer was bound
to bring them through, and faced the
gale raging over Charlotte Harbor
and successfully weathered it."
En route from Punta Gorda to Fort
Myers, the steamer made stops at St.
James City, Sanibel Island and Punta
Rassa. At Punta Rassa the editors
found the wharf and adjoining buildings decorated with flags,flowers and
palms. A huge "weIcome" sign had
been fashioned of red and white
Scotch thistle. Greeting them also was
Dr. S.A. Binion, "a noted linguist, author and translator."
Dr. Binion explained the sigruficance of the decorations by saying
that the palm represented peace and
the thistle combativeness, "two
things every editor should have, the
first for ordinary occasions, the latter
to use when assailed."
The St. Lucie docked at Fort Myers
at 4:30 p.m. and again the editors saw
more decorations and a welcome sign
fashioned of tarpon scales.
The first session began at 8 p.m. in
the Baptist Church with President
J.W. White presiding. Dr. J.F.Shands,
a Fort Myers clergyman, delivered the
f i s t major address of the meeting,
paying tribute to the press in these
words:
"A hundred years of victory is dosing the most advanced civilization the
world has known. The chief developing powers are-pulpit, schoolroom
and press, thrown open for the use
and protection of all classes. I am
called upon to impress upon you that
not least ii-tthe development of modem manhood is a free press.
"The newspaper has made itself an
angel of light and comfort; without it
American civilization, humanity,
government, yea, and all that we call
society would disappear before the
brawny arm of unrestrained greed. In
these later years the most welcome
visitant that enters every real American home is the newspaper.
"Noble editors, if we are to maintain our place and add to our value
among the nations, you must meet
withand defeat the deepest-laid plans
of the trickster, not only in the time-
honored institutions, known as the
pulpit, the professois chair,and the
political platform, but everywhere, by
going into every man's home with a
message so stimulating and beautiful
that it will stir the heart and move the
will to righteous action."
During the "literary" program
later in the evening, Philip Izaacs of
The Fort Myers Press addressed the
editors on the subject, "The Editor at
Home." Theo B. Hartig of The East
Floridian, Palatka, discussed the topic,
"Rational Business Methods in Journalism."
Three other addresses dosed out
the evening. These included: "How to
Maintain and Increase a Subscription
List," by C.L. Bittinger of The Ocala
Star; "The Morning Newspaper In
National Questions," by George W.
Wilson of The Jacksonville Times-Union
and Citizen; and "The Duty of the Press
to Public Morals," by the Rev. L.D.
Geiger of The Apopka Citizen. Tom F.
McBeath, School Exponent, Jacksonville, recited the annual poem.
During the business session on
Wednesday moming, George P. Wilson, of 7le Jacksonville Times-Union
and Citizen, suggested that the association adopt a plan to give up the
reading of papers at the state conventions and substitute a newspaper that
would be published by the members
for one day.
r. Wilson explained
that the papers presented at the conventions were prepared long before the
convention and sometimes were not
pertinent to the needs of the day. He
argued that a newspaper, published
during the convention, would be uptodate. He suggested that an editorin-chief be appointed who would select various members to write editorials, news articles, etc. Prizes were to
be awarded as follows:
"For the best news report of 1,000
words, asa leader, $15; second best, 800
words, $10. Best editorial leader, 800
words, 915; second best editorial subhead, 500 words, $10. Best local report,
1,000 words, $15. Best society article,
800 words, $10. Best descriptive article, $15. Best police report, $10. Best
article for women's department, $15.
In addition to these prizes, Mr. B.B.
Tatum of The Miami Metropolis offered
$10 for the best short poem."
The suggestion was adopted and
ordered to be effective at the next state
meeting Eo be held in Miami. In this
way was born the first state newspaper contest program in Florida.
At the business meeting thefollowing officers were elected to serve during 1900-1901. These were: President,
J.W. White, Fraternal Record, Jacksonville; Vice President, B.B. Tatum, Metropolis, Miami; Secretary, T.J.
Appleyard, Inter-Ocean, Key West;
and Treasurer, E.W. Peabody, TimesUnion and Citizen,Jacksonville. President White announced that his executive committee for the coming year
would be Tom F. McBeath, Theo B.
Hartig, George W. Wilson, R.A.
Russell and Frank Walpole.
Much of the discussion at the business meeting concerned the cost of
newsprint and what the members
called the "paper trust." A committee
headed by C.L. Bittinger presented a
resolution calling on the U.S. Senate
.and House of Representatives to stop
the activities of the trust. This resolution was adopted unanimously.
"Whereas, We, members of the
Florida Press Association, have felt
the pinch of the International Paper
Company trust, and are of the opinion
that we will feel it more severely still
if something is not done to break the
deadly grip of that overbearing, insolent monopoly, and
"Whereas, This rise is a mere tax on
us as publishers. Individually we can
do nothing; the merchant can mark up
his goods; we have no such recourse;
therefore be it
"Resolved, That we as a body believe that no trust should be fostered
by legislation; that all trusts should
depend upon their own business sagacity, not the protection given them
by the general Govenunent;
Resolved, That holding this belief,
we hereby appeal to our United States
Senators and Congressmen, individually, to assist in the repeal of such
tariff duties as serve to protect the
trust in its extortionate charges for
white paper."
At a second "literary session" on
Wednesday night W.E. Pabor, former
poet laureate of the FPA who had
moved from the state, was asked to
read one of his poems. He responded
Florida Living / September 1993
Spectators watching the elec:ronic baseball game board outside The Lakeland Ledger on Oct. 4,1924, during week of the World Sen'esNew York Giants versus Washington Senators. The Giants won thut game, 4-3, but the Senators won the World Series.
with a poem called, "The Lady of
B.B. Taturn and wife, rMetropolis,
Siam." Papers delivered at this sesMiami
sion included: "Business is Our BusiT.J. Appleyard, Inter-Ocean, Key
ness," by Frank W. Walpole of The . West
Palmetto News; "Foreign AdvertisMajor E.A. Peabody and wife,
ing" by E.O. Painter, Agriculturist,
Times-Union and Citizen, Jacksonville
DeLand; "Needed Legislation," by
W.E. Pabor, Pabor Lake
Fred L. Robertson, The Nms-Register,
Frank V. Baker and wife, Chronicle,
Brooksville; "The Editorial DepartSanford
ment," by P.A. Vans-Agnetv, The ValFrank A. Wdpole, Neiis, Palmetto
ley Gazette, Kissimmee; "How to
E.O. Painter and wife, Agriculturist, DeLmd
Make the Association a Practical
Benefit," by John C. Tricp, Tlte
T.E. Arnold and wife, Deiand
Tallahassean, Tallahassee.
J. Ira Gore, Titries, St. Petersburg
The official roster oi those attendE.B. Calhoun, Times-Coicrier,
ing the Fort Myers meeting contained
hfarianna
the following names:
A. Winthrop Sarsent and wife,
J.W. White, Thc Fra!crnal Record,
Idea, Avon P u k
Jacksonville
Walter S. Turner, wife and two
FlnrirIa 1
ivino / C , n t s . m h r . r
IOQl
children, lournal, Corded
C.L. Bittinger, wife and daughter,
Star, Ocala
Dr. and Mrs. Hughes, Daytona
Miss Marie E. Mann, Gazette-News,
Daytona
Miss Codrington, News, DeLand
Frank Horton and wife, News,
Arcadia
Prof. Tom McBeath and wife,
Florida School Exponent, jacksonville
I.M.Putnam, Sentinel, High Springs
F. Ion Robertson, XCLUS-Register,
Brooksville
Rev. L.D.Geiger, Citizen, Apopka
F.C. Edwards and ~ v i f eMicanopy
,
JohnFrank, industrial Florida, Jacksonville
Theo B. Hartig, East Floridian,
47
@nk in
the OSmd
Palatka
Daniel Gillis, Advocate, Westville
C.Y. Miller and wife, News,
Dunnellon
W.H. Lawrence, Republican, Tallahassee
T.E. Child, Champion, Arcadia
Twenty new members were accepted into the association at the Fort
Myers meeting, termed a "remarkable one." TheFort Myers Press said the
meeting was remarkable because "attendance was large and every one was
deeply interested innewspaperwork;
there was more attention paid to business, and in devising and discussing
methods of improving the condition
of the association and its members."
Following are the names of the 20
new members accepted into the association:
Herbert L. Dodd, Reporter, Lake
C.C.Post, Freedom, Seabreeze
Mrs. T.E. Arnold, Agriculturist,
DeLand
W.B. Harris, Valley Gazette,
Kissimmee
Alfred St. Claire-Abrams, Herald,
Tavares
Miss Marie E. Mann, Gazeite-News,
Daytona
Rev. F.C. Edwards, East Aladtua
Citizen, Micanopy
J.E. Low, 77te Spring, Green Cove
Springs
W.D. Commander, The Gazette,
Laurel HU
Charles A. Wimer, Sub-Peninsula,
St. Petersburg
Frank Horton, DeSoto CountyNews,
Arcadia
John Thomas Porter and H.L. Porter, West Florida Echo, Grand Ridge
Israel M. Putnam, Sentinel, High
Springs
Sumter L. Lowrv, Southern Pythian,
Tampa
Frank W. Baker, Gate City Chronicle,
Sanford
W.M. Featherley, Metropolis,
Miami
D.K. Thompson, Record, St. Augustine
Robert McNarnee, Evening News,
Jacksonville
O.J. Keep, Hedd, Quincy
Two other events were highlights
of the press association's meeting in
Fort Myers: an excursion on the
Caloosahatchee River and the final
banquet at the Fort Myers Hotel on
Thursday night. In reporting on the
river trip, The Fort Mym Press explained to its readers that a few editors in the state held aloof from the
Florida Press Association because of
the "junketing" trips of the association, but, the paper said, it would
guarantee that thosecomplainingeditors knew less about their state than
those who belonged to the association
and took the trips since the association met in various parts of the state.
m
e editors and their wives
went aboard two steamers,
the Grey Eagle and the
Suwannee, for theu day-long excursion. The Fort Myen Press described
the trip as follows:
"Both steamers left the Plant
steamboat wharf at 7 a.m. with as jolly
a party of editors, and ladies, together
with a good sprinkling of town
people, as one could find on many a
day's travel. The fun was incessant.
Jokes and pranks were played on each
other, and all hands were 'roasted."'
Describing a stop at one of the numerous orange groves along the river,
the newspaper said:
"A stop was made at the orange
grove of W. E.E. Goodno, who with
his mother welcomed the editors,
loading them down with sprigs of
blossoms untilnot a lady was without
blossoms. The trees were cleaned of
the few remaining scattering of oranges left by the pickers, but Mr.
Goodno complained not, but added
greatly to the pleasure of the visitors."
These scattering of oranges were
not without great value, however,
because the newspaper later reported
on baskets of fruit presented to each
visitor at the evening banquet:
"WithgrapefruitatS15perboxand
king oranges at $20, it was no easy
matter to ask our citizens to reserve
their fruit for the visits of the editors.
But enough was saved to give each a
good taste of Fort Myers fruits. I.V.;.,
the editors went aboard the St. !: / ~ I L
homewaqi bound, each editor was
presented with a basket upon the
handle of which was tied with ribbon
a tarpon scale, upon which was
printed, 'Compliments of Citizens of
Fort Myers,' with date and occasion of
meeting.
"Each basket contained three
grapefruit, one king orange, a tangerine, several seedling oranges, kumquats, bananas, and a can of catley
guavas from the Seminole Canning
Co., and so the editors were sent on
their way rejoicing, with oft repeated
expressions of thanks to our citizens
for the entertainment received, and
expressions to theeffect that their visit
to Ft. Myers would ever be remembered with pleasure and gratification."
The newspaper described the banquet at the Fort Myers Hotel as such
that the "elaborateness was a surprise
to many accustomed to such functions in large cities." The paper spoke
of the "long verandas, the corridors
and parlors" as being crowded with
the visitors and the regular guests of
the house who "mingled" with the
editors. While the Fort Myers band
played, the guests "promenaded and
conversed." The newspaper said,
"After a while Captain W.O.Rew
brought his new patent phonograph
into the parlor, and showed the difference in sound between his and the
phonograph now in use. Thus, our
guests while here saw one of the first
phonographs ever made, and also the
latest improved machine."
The editors had visited the Thomas
Edison home and had seen Edison's
original phonograph.
The banquet hall was described by
The Fort Myers Press writer, as follows:
"At 9:30 o'clock the dining-room
doors were thrown open, and a beautiful sight was presented. In the center
of the room was a large floral decoration, while on every hand were flowers and plants from the tropical gardens of Fort Myers. Covers were laid
for 83 persons, and each place was
occupied.
"Besides the floral decorations, the
ingenious chef had shown his master
hand in several set pieces, that on the
center table being a fantastic piece, on
the side table a ship under full sail,
Florida Living / September 1393
I
1
with the letters 'F.P.A.,' thereon was
greatly admired, and on the left side
was the hut of a fisherman, all made of
mutton tallow, and artides which required the slow work of days to bring
together."
Judged by modem standards, one
of the most remarkable things about
the banquet was the menu. The dinen
began with an oyster cocktail and
went on to courses with the following
foods: radishes, olives, cream of celery and consomme imperiale; fillet of
Caloosahatchee River trout, 21 la
Montreuill; potatoes Parisienne; St.
Julienne; boiled leg of southern mutton, caper sauce; new green peas;
breast of chicken en ausstade, a la
reine; cardinal punch; roast of wild
turkey, sweet potato dressing, aanberry sauce; stuffed tomatoes, potato
croquettes, asparagus with sauce
Hollandaise; haut sauterne; salade
russe; strawberry ice aeam; champagne; assorted cake, Edam cheese,
American cheese, water wafers, nuts,
layer raisins; coffee and cigars.
"The fun was
incessant. Jokes
and pranks were
played on each other,
and all hands were
'roasted."'
Before the editors left Fort Myers,
they passed a resolution of thanks to
Editor Philip Isaacs of l7ae Fort Myers
Press in which they said:
"This association realizes and expresses with fraternal thanks that Editor Isaacs of The Fort Myers Press, in the
meeting held, has fulfilled with good
measure,'shaken down and running
over, every promise made at St. Petersburg, and trust that success may
ever be his, and the good work he is
engaged in, of supplying Fort Myers
with a model local paper, worthy of
the invited and hearty support, may
never be lacking the courteous gentleman and commendable editor."
The editors returned to Punta
Gorda on the St. Lucie on Friday, and
upon their arrival were greeted by a
large delegation of citizens and given
ice aeam and cake. This act prompted
one member of the editorial party to
ask if they looked hungry, "since everyone seemed anxious to give them
something to eat." It was reported
that at Arcadia a number of editors
stopped over for a day and were given
a banquet and a ride in the orange
groves.
Miami Meeting in 1901
The 1901meeting of the association
in Miami was important for two reasons: the awarding of the first prizes
given in the history of FFA forjoumalistic writing, and the publication of
the first copies of The Press Association
Bulletin, a publication written and
edited by members of the association
at the state convention,anon-the-spot
publication.
In Mar. 15,1901, about one week
before the Florida Press Association
was scheduled to meet in Miami,The
Miami Metropolis published the official rules governing the first issue of
The Florida Press Association Bulletin
and the writing contests. The article
began by saying: "Interest in The
Florida Press Association Bulletin, to be
edited and published by the association at the approaching convention in
Miami, continues to grow, and the
newspaper fraternity of the entire
country is watching for this composite paper-an innovation that appeals
to all persons indeed who are interested in newspapers and newspaper
undertakings. The indications are
that there will be spirited contests between the Florida editors, who will
constitute the staff, in the several lines
of work in which prizes are offered."
The rules specified that at the
morning session on Wednesday, Mar.
20, the association must appoint an
editor-in<hief wh6 would be in full
charge of getting out n t e Bulletin. The
rules further specified that the editorin-chief would be responsible for selecting a stdf to handle such areas as
telegraph news, city editor duties,
night city editor duties, editorialwriting, agricultural news, society news,
and the general editing of the paper.
Much of the material to be used in The
Bulletin would come from those
entering the various contests for
which cash prizes were being offered
by The ]acksonville Timcs-Union and
Citizen.
The areas of competition for these
contests were listed as follows:
"Best editorial on the subject of
"Florida," limited to 800 words. A
subleader editorial on the subject,
"What Makes a Good Newspaper,"
limited to 500 words. Best paragraphs, to commence with a single
line of seven words and consist of 20
paragraphs. Editorials on the news
and current matters, to be furnished
by the editorial writers. Best local
news story of Miami;1,000 words for
the lead; no limit as to personals and
news happenings of the day; this report is to consist of all the local incidents of the town for the day and
evening.
"Best report of the meeting of the
association: 1,000 words; to consist of
description of individuals, proceedings, amusing incidents, and grotesque situations. Best descriptive article on Miami: 1,000 words; to consist
of the best general description, history, growth, leading men, and public
institutions. Best news report: 1,000
words; to consist of some imaginary
incident and description of some
greatcalamity, battle, convention @olitical or industrial), riot, storm on
land or sea, fire, inauguration of a
Demwatic president in 1905, or any
subject within the discretion of the
party contesting.
"Best compilation of a Woman's
World Department; two columns to
consist of household suggestions,
recipes, fashions, etc. Best society report: 800 words; description of a ball
at Royal Palm. Best report of a police
court pr~ceeding:800 words; consisting of a description of characters, appearing daily in a police court of a
large city-pathetic pictures, depravity, hard core cases and crooks. Best
short poem, subject to be elected by
the contestant."
The main body of the press group
arrived in Miami after an all-day run
from Jacksonville on Mar. 19, via the
Florida East Coast Railway. Editor
B.B. Tatum of The Miami Metropolis
and several Miami officials met the
train in Palm Beach and supplied the
editors and their guests with badges
Wnk in
the O$md
and gave them free carriage rides to
and from their hotels and about the
city. The majority of the 60 or more
association members on the train
went to the Royal Palm Hotel in Miami where the press headquarters
had been established.
The conventionwas called to order
by President J.W. White at 10 a . a on
Wednesday and one of the first actions was the organization of the staff
of Thc Florida Press Associatiun Bulletin.
Frank B. Harris was chosen editor-inchief; T.J. Appleyard was named
managing editor; E.O.'Painter, agricultural editor; Miss E. Nellie Beck
and Miss Sara Harris, society editors;
and E.W. Peabody and C.B. Smith,
copy editors.
At the Wednesday night "litenry"
program the editors heard Tom
McBeath's annual poem, "The Genie
of the Well," said to be the "most
profound of his yearly contributions." JohnM.Gldwell read a paper
on "Newspapers: Past and Present,"
and Frank E. Harris addressed the
convention on the topic, "Advice
fromanOld Editorto Young Editors.''
Two other papers, "Free Advertising,"by Frank Walpole, and "The Society Column," by Miss NeUie Beck,
dosed the evening.
On Thursday morning the annual
election of officers took place with the
following slate being elected without
opposition: President, B.B. Tatum,
MiamiMetropolis; Vice President, E.W.
Peabody, Jacksonville Times-Union and
Citizen; Secretary, T.J. Appleyard, Key
West Inter-Ocean; and Treasurer,
Philip Izaac, Fort Myers News Press.
An invitation was extended to the
editors by the Florida Commissioner
to attend the Pan-American Exposition any time between May and November. The editors agreed to accept
the invitation and asked that thg trip
to Buffalo be arranged for September.
During the afternoon, the editors of
Thc Florida Press Association Bulletin
went to workand the remainder of the
group was driven to the tomato and
vegetable farms northwest of town.
The ladiss were entertained at a tea
given by Mrs. B.B. Tatum, assisted by
Mrs. William S. Jennings, wife of
Florida's governor.
Thursday night, Governor and
Mrs.Jenningswere guests of honor at
a reception at the Royal Palm and
afterward the editors danced until
midnight.
Friday was a day of mishaps. It
began in the morning when the group
assembled at the Royal Palm to take
carriages to Coconut Grove, but unfortunately a Nassau tourist ship
came in late and the tourists took all
the carriages and kept them until it
was too late for the editorial party to
go to Coconut Grove. A substitute trip
up the Miami River was hurriedly
ananged and then at 2 p.m. association members boarded the P & 0
steamship, Marfinique, commanded
by Captain Dillon,for an excursion on
the bay and a few miles out into the
Atlantic. A writer for The Miami Metropolis described what happened:
"'C.L. Bittinger,
editor of this paper
(The Star) was very
seriously injured
about 9 3 0 this
morning."
"The trip proved thoroughly delightful toallaboarduntilaboutamile
outside when some would suddenly
pale, jump up and make a break for
the cabin. Once inside they were lost
to the sight of deriding friends and
Pursur Ligeur won the everlasting
regard of the victims by professing
ignorance of their whereabouts.
"On the return the steamship was
found stuck in the mud just op- '
posite the Royal P&. The Martinique
soon helped her on her way amid
cheers from those aboard both ships,
but, soon after herself went hard
aground and there she stayed, with a
prospect of awaiting high tide. A few
of the visitors had arranged to leave
on the 8 o'clock train so they went
ashore in launches that came out, but
the crowd generally appeared to 4njoy this unexpected prolongation of
their voyage."
This h g e in plans ended with
the finalbusiness session of the Miami
convention being held on the ship
after the ship's officers served an
'abundance of fine coffee and tea and
a light luncheon.' The 'literary' part of
the program was deleted since the
papers to be presented were at the
Hotel Royal Palm. Most of the business of the evening consisted of hearing a report of the resolutions comrnittee, which produced a lengthy resolution concerning the publication of The
Florida Press Association Bulletin, as follows:
"Whereas, the publication of The
Annual Bulletin of the association is a
novel, instructive and entertaining
feature of our meeting and the continuation of its publication at subsequent annualmeetings will be of great
benefit to us and to our state.
"Therefore, be it resolved: That we
earnestly favor the publication of The
Annual Bulletin and recommend that
in the future the association offer its
own prizes. That the president of the
association appoint a publication
committee whose duty it shall be to
make the necessary arrangements for
its publication and solicit advertisements therefore.
"That due notice be given to those
who are to read papers at the annual
meetings so that the various papers to
be given to the proper committee for
publication in The Bulletin, with the
official report of the proceedings of
the meetings.
"We feel that the initial number of
The Bulletin owing to the circumstancesunderwhich it was published,
was in every way a success.
"The Bulletin was published after a
night session of the association and
under many disadvantages.
"To those who volunteered their
services in assisting Mr. Taturn in the
mechanical department and making
its publication in a single night, a success, we reour fraternal thanks.
"We desire also in this connection
to return thanks to Mr. B.B. Tatum
for his invaluable assistance in this
venture and for the use of TheMetropolis plant, also to Mr. E.T. Byington
of The News for many courtesies
extended by him.
"We feel that the success of The
Bulletin was largely due to 7he TimesUnion and Citizen for the liberal prizes
offered and for the publicity given The
Bulletin by this p e a t newspaper. We
therefore return our most sincere and
grateful thanks to The Times-Union and
Citizen."
The tone of this resolution suggests
that The Bulletin was produced with
great effort and it may have been presented to put at rest some fears that
the undertaking was too much to
handle. Also, the fact that the resolution called for advertising to support
futureissues of Thc Bulletin openedup
an entirely new aspect of this project
that may have been responsible for its
eventual demise.
Judges for the writing contest were
outof-state editors, brought to the
meeting as guests of the Florida Press
Association. They were Frank P.
Glass, general manager of The Montgomery Advertiser, Montgomery, Alabama; Robert Mitchell Floyd of 'Ilze
Trades Press List, Boston, Mass.; and
C.W. Wilgus, of The Ravenna, Ohio
Republican. Winners in the contest
were:
Editorial Leader, "Florida," Frank
Harris, Ocala Banner; Sub Leader,
"What Makes a Good Newspaper,"
Thomas A. Davis, Peninsula Breeze,
Sea Breeze; Editorial Paragraphs,
Frank A. Mapole, News, Palmetto;
Account of Convention, M. Arter, St.
Petersburg Times; Description of Miami, M. Arter, St. Petersburg Times;
News Report, Imaginary Happening,
John M. Caldwell, Lake City Index;
Midnight Locals, Philip Isaacs, Fort
Mym Press; Society Reports, Ellis B.
Wagner, Titusville Star; Police Court
Report, F. Ion Robertson, Brooksville
Register; Poem, Tom P. McBeath,
School Exponent, Jacksonville; Write
Up of Dade County Fair, J. M.
Caldwell, Lake City Index.
The Miami Metropolis described the
meeting as the largest in the history of
the association. It reported that 42
new members were accepted at the
Miami meeting, bringing the total
membership to 117. More than 100
persons attended the Miami meeting,
the paper reported.
At this meeting the association
adopted one resolutionnot concerned
with its own affairs, a resolution approving the work of the Women's
Christian TemperanceUnion, and the
State Federation of Women's Clubs
"in endeavoring to upbuild the moral
forces of the State of Florida" The
association said it endorsed the work
of these two organizations in their
efforts to obtain legislation "to amend
our laws relating to the protection of
girls."
The guest list at the convention
contained the following names of association members and friends:
Col. C.C. Post, Seabreeze
Miss H. Burgman, Seabreeze
Thomas A. Davis and wife,
Seabreeze
A.T. Cornwalland wife, Bradenton
F.E. Harris and two daughters,
Ocala
C.Y. Miller and daughter,
Dunnellon
C.L. Bittinger, wife and daughter,
Ocala
W.S. Jennings, wife and son,
Brooksville
Miss Grace Mann, Brooksville
H.H. McCreary and wife,
Gainesville
O.J. Farmer and wife, Bronson
F.I. Robertson and daughter,
Brooksville
E.O. Painter and wife, DeLand
H.W.Bishop, wifeandchild, Eustis
Fred Cubberly, Cedar Key
J.H. Humphries and wife,
Bradenton
W.S. Turner, Cordeal
S.L. Lowry and wife, Tampa
Philip Issacs and son, Fort Myers
S.R. Hudson and wife, Orlando
J.W. White, Jacksonville
L.W. Zim, Evaville
E.W. Peabody and daughter,
Sanford
F.A. Walpole and wife, Palmetto
Tom F. McBeath and wife, Jacksonville
E.G.Mack, Wewahitchka
Don C. Mdvlden, Clearwater
T.M.Pulestonand wife, Monticello
Miss Stella Puleston, Monticello
Mrs. J.E.Smith, Monticello
Miss Clara Lindsey, Monticello
Miss Ingram, Monticello
Miss Berta Carroll, Monticello
C.B. Smith, Jasper
W.B.Hare, St. Augustine
W.T. Wilson and wife, Apopka
J.C. Burwell and wife, Brooksville
A.S. Mann and wife, Brooksville
T.J.Appleyard, Key West
T.T. Stpdcton, Jacksonville
F.A. Mann, St. Augustine
J.C.Porter, Ocala
C.R.Oslin, Melbourne
A.G. Moore, Marianna
Miss Marie Mann, Daytona
Miss Nellie Mann,Daytona
E.B. Wager and wife, Titusville
F. Ion Robertson, Brooksville
W.H.Lawrence, Tallahassee
J.M.Caldwell and son, Lake City
M. Arter and wife, St. Petersburg
Guy L. Bonham, St. Augustine
E.V. Bladvnan and wife, Miami
E.T. Byington and wife, Miami
B.B. Taturn and wife, Miami
Miss E. Nellie Beck, Miami
C.W. Wilgus and wife, Ravenna,
Ohio
F.P. Glass, Montgomery, Alabama
John M. Glassco, Charleston, Illinois
E.D.Oslin, Southern Pines, North
Carolina
J.E. Richmond, Honesdale, Pennsylvania
Colonel Brewer, Salvation Army
Journals
A
s a footnote to the Mami
convention, The Miami
Metropolis reported on
Apr. 5, 1901, the following accident
that involved C.L. Bittinger of The
Ocnla Star shortly after he returned
from the convention:
"C.L. Bittinger, editor of this paper
(The Star) was very seriously injured
about 930 this morning. He was going to the southern part of the county
on business and was in a huny, so
took passage on the morning freight
on the Plant System. He was sitting in
the caboose reading a paper, while
waiting for the train to pull out, and
was near the door, with his back partially toward the opening. The caboose was an old-fashioned one, with
the.doors on one side.
"The train crew was sMting cars,
getting the train in readiness and cut
the caboose loose from the train.The
brakes were not put on and it ran
down rapidly and struck some other
cars with a severe jar.
"Mr. Bittinger paid no attention to
the car's movements, as he supposed
it was under control, and when the
collision came he was thrown out of
'
@nk in
the mmd
the door, and in falling caught on his
right hand the weight of his body,
breaking the wrist and shattering the
bone very badly.
"His right ear was tom painfully
and the cartilagecut entirely through,
and his left ankle was painfully,
though not seriously cut. In falling,
Mr. Bittinger shuck on the rail and
would have been crushed by the
wheels of the car but rolled himself
out before the wheels caught his body.
"He was assisted home and Dr.
Powers of the Plant System and Dr.
Smith summoned. His injuries were
dressed and the broken wrist set and
put in splints quickly and most skillW y and he is now resting as well as
could be expected, though suffering
much pain."
That the Florida Press Association
was not approved by every newspaper in Florida is indicated by aneditorial note in The Miami Metropolis after
the convention. The comment concerned the editor of The Tampa Tribune
and read as follows:
"The editor of The Tampa Tribune
can make himself the most agreeable
of men, personally, but he certainly
permits his editorial columns to frequently express the most contemptibly narrow and unworthy sentiments. For some reason, not publicly
stated, he has for several years vented
a n ugly spirit toward the Florida Press
Association that is unworthy of any
respectable newspaper man.
"lie Tribune is a fearless paper in
an indefinite sort of way and has a
happy faculty of occasionally striking
a popular chord, but it is rather more
recuess than courageous in its statements, which detracts materially
from its innocence. But its defects
seemconstitutional, which is perhaps
natural to a newspaper whose journalistic knowledge is confined solely
to the life within the walls of its own
business office and composing
rooms."
Bethel Blanton Tatum, the newly
elected president of the Florida Press
Association, was one of the early lead-
ers in the development of south
Florida, his primary contribution to
Florida journalism being the establishment of the first daily newspaper
in Dade County, The Miami Daily Mefropolis. Tatum purchased the then
weekly Miami Metrupolis in 1899, and
continued to publish the newspaper
as a weekly until December of 1903,
when daily publication began. He held
the dual role of editor of The Metropolis
and president of the Miami Printing
Company until Apr. 10,1923, when he
sold the properties to former Ohio governor, James M. Cox. Within a few
years, the name of the newspaper was
changed to The Miami Daily News.
"The editor of The
Tampa Tribune can
make himself the most
agreeable of men,
personally, but he
certainly permits his
editorial columns
frequently express the
most contemptibly
narrow and unworthy
sentiments."
The sale of The Metropolis marked
the end of a 36-year career as a newspaperman for Tatam that began in
1887when he bought The Polk County
(Fla.) Informant. He operated that
newspaper for only a few months,
before selling it and establishing nie
Advance Courier, which circulated in
the Bartow area. Late in 1888, Tatum
reacquired Thelnfbnnant,and consolidated the two newspapers under the
name of The Courier-lnfinant. Less
than a year later, he sold thisproperty
and headed north, where in late 1889
he became editor of The Herald at
Rome, Georgia.That newspaper published both a daily and a weekly
edition.
During the 1890s. Tatum sold the
Rome newspapers and returned to
Bwtow, where he became involved in
the real estate business. During that
time, a stock company of local busi-
nessmen was formed to gain control
of Thc Courier-Infbnnan t, Tatum's old
newspaper. Following purchase of
the paper, Taturn once more becme
editor, a position he held until the fall
of 1899 when he purchased The .Metropolis.
In addition to his newspaper business, Tatum was active in various
other ventures throughout his career.
While in Bartow, he served one term
as mayor and was amember of the city
council for several years. He also was
a director of the Polk County National
Bank. After his location in Miami,
Taturn was an active booster of the
plan to convert the Everglades into
productive fann areas, and devoted
much of his personal time to the program.He also was active in both state
and national journalistic organizations. In addition to his year as president of the Florida Press Association,
he served as a delegate to the National
Editorial Association meeting in Buffalo, New York in 1901.
After he sold The Miami Metropolis,
Taturn became associated with his
brothers in various real estate corporations-the Tatum Brothers Company, Lawrence Estate Land Company, Miami Traction Company,
Tatum's Ocean Park Company, .Miami Land & Development Company,
and Florida Title & Investment Company. One biographer wrote that at
one time the Tatum Land Company
controlled more than "200,000 aaes of
Everglades lands and was a pioneer
deveIoper of this area."
Taturn was born to the Rev. and
Mrs. A.S. Tatum on Mar. 1, 1864, at
Dawson County, Georgia, where the
elder T a m was serving as a Baptist
minister. Tatum spent most of his
early years at Adairsville, Georgia. At
age 17, he set out on his own, heading
south into Florida. His first stop was a
brief one in Orlando, before moving
to Kissirnrnee, where he became a
sawmill hand. About 1884,he moved
to Bartow, where he and his brother
established their own sawmill. Tatum
remained in this occupation for three
years and then turned to the newspaper business.
In March 1889, he married Mary
Forsythe, the daughter of Colonel
Forsythe, a prominent attorney in
Rome, Georgia. He later married
Letah Marshall of Kansas City.
a